Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm a US-born person of East European descent, and have lived and worked in Russia for years. I think this charter could be great, if it integrated the best parts of Russian literary, artistic, and academic cultures.
The language piece is kind of secondary to high academic standards, and wanting your child to grow up highly literate.
I'm not sure who the target audience is, though, as there is already a Russian-language school run through the Russian Embassy.
Could you please share more info on this? I thought it only serves embassy kids and not open to the public.
Anonymous wrote:PP 12:56 - My children have attended the Embassy school. It is certainly geared towards the children of diplomats, but there are a handful of non-diplomats who attend. My children went there because we moved to Washington from Moscow unexpectedly and thought it would be more comfortable for them to stick with the system they knew. It is the Russian state curriculum, which as you probably know is a very specific thing. If you're interested for a child older than ?????? ?????, I think it would be very difficult to start.
I also know the people who are trying to start the Tolstoy Academy and they are thinking of it as an immersion program (like many others in the city) that also emphasizes the strengths of the Russian curriculum - math, science, classic literature.
I am happy that my children are bilingual in Russian and I think that, given the state of affairs between Russia and the US, Russian-language skills are likely to be in demand in the future.
Anonymous wrote:Good to know that the "maybe hurts J Steele's feelings" barometer is the gauge of acceptable discourse.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Russian just isn't useful as a language for most people and I can't imagine they will have an easy time hiring for those positions. German is only slightly more useful and would be equally hard to hire for.
actually know. I read a survey once that German as a second language produces the highest paid job opportunities way more than spanish or french. German/English bilingualism means jobs in high tech, automotive, finance, pharmaceuticals etc, as opposed t more development type work with many other languages.

Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There is a long history on DCUM of bashing Russians, Israelis and Asians.
Russian is an incredibly difficult language to learn. Starting kids young makes a lot of sense in terms of neurological connections their young brains are going to make.
Aside from being able to take and pass the AP Russian exam, your kids will have employment advantages from foreign service, to intelligence, to NGOs, etc. A foreign language can only help, and learning a difficult language such as Russian, will allow your children to learn other languages easier.
To those who say that Russian sounds awful, I have not found that at all. it is a soft and melodic language, maybe not as sing songy as Latin languages, but it not a barking language like German and Nordic languages.
There's absolutely no indication that this school will be for young children.
Anonymous wrote:There is a long history on DCUM of bashing Russians, Israelis and Asians.
Russian is an incredibly difficult language to learn. Starting kids young makes a lot of sense in terms of neurological connections their young brains are going to make.
Aside from being able to take and pass the AP Russian exam, your kids will have employment advantages from foreign service, to intelligence, to NGOs, etc. A foreign language can only help, and learning a difficult language such as Russian, will allow your children to learn other languages easier.
To those who say that Russian sounds awful, I have not found that at all. it is a soft and melodic language, maybe not as sing songy as Latin languages, but it not a barking language like German and Nordic languages.
Anonymous wrote:I'm a US-born person of East European descent, and have lived and worked in Russia for years. I think this charter could be great, if it integrated the best parts of Russian literary, artistic, and academic cultures.
The language piece is kind of secondary to high academic standards, and wanting your child to grow up highly literate.
I'm not sure who the target audience is, though, as there is already a Russian-language school run through the Russian Embassy.