Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:i think some of the posters a missing the point. some umc black children with very highly educated parents are specifically choosing to attend banneker but similarly-situated dc white families statistically make different choices. its worth looking at why.
I think that you are missing the point. Some UMC black children with very highly educated parents are specifically choosing not to attend Banneker because of lack of rigor and lower than expected test scores.
BS. My son went to Banneker. It was a lot harder than the private we moved him too. It has too much rigor. It was intense. BTW, I am a lawyer and dad is an Exec. I think UMC black families didn't send their kids there because the ice was colder at other schools.
Anonymous wrote:PP, IDK if it is required, but it's highly recommended. From talking with current and former families who attended Banneker missing the summer program is not a good way to start your experience with the school. Plus, I would not want my child to be behind in making social connections. We decided to schedule our usual summer plans around the July dates.
Anonymous wrote:Parent here of an accepted student at Banneker I have heard the summer program is from July 5-29 from 9-12 but I have not heard anything from the school yet.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Thanks for this. So is it only for 2 weeks a summer normally or was that just due to covid last year?
It was supposed to be 3 weeks last summer at Banneker but the middle week was canceled b/c of COVID. In previous years, it's been 5 weeks, but for whatever reason, they shortened it last year. I'm not sure whether it'll be 3 weeks or 5 weeks, or something else altogether, going forward.
Walls has a one-week session.
Banneker also assigns far more summer homework (reading, math, etc) than Walls for incoming 9th graders.
Anonymous wrote:Thanks for this. So is it only for 2 weeks a summer normally or was that just due to covid last year?
Anonymous wrote:Can someone tell me about summer work requirements for each school? I read that Banneker has a rather long in person requirement over the summer. Is this accurate? Does walls have anything similar? Thanks!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:i think some of the posters a missing the point. some umc black children with very highly educated parents are specifically choosing to attend banneker but similarly-situated dc white families statistically make different choices. its worth looking at why.
I think that you are missing the point. Some UMC black children with very highly educated parents are specifically choosing not to attend Banneker because of lack of rigor and lower than expected test scores.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The homework overkill is my main worry about the school. THAT seems very old school to me. What’s the point of all the homework/busywork if it’s not producing better students?
I think the huge emphasis on so much homework without producing great results at the expense of everything else such as extracurriculars with spurts, clubs, etc.. is a big negative why many middle class families don’t send their kids to Banneker.
I support homework but with the volume till 1 or 2am in addition to Saturday prep classes. Not for our DC.
If your kid is up till 2am doing homework then you need to reach out to the school to figure out what is wrong. That should not be the case. Clear indication that your kid is not processing and/or able to express their knowledge in a reasonable process or timeline.
This is not intended as a shot at your kid. Just an observation based on the facts you have presented.
I’m the PP you are responding to. Re-read the thread. It’s not my kid. It’s the PP above whose kid is at Banneker who is staying up to 1-2am and going to Saturday prep classes.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:i think some of the posters a missing the point. some umc black children with very highly educated parents are specifically choosing to attend banneker but similarly-situated dc white families statistically make different choices. its worth looking at why.
I think that you are missing the point. Some UMC black children with very highly educated parents are specifically choosing not to attend Banneker because of lack of rigor and lower than expected test scores.
Anonymous wrote:i think some of the posters a missing the point. some umc black children with very highly educated parents are specifically choosing to attend banneker but similarly-situated dc white families statistically make different choices. its worth looking at why.
Anonymous wrote:i think some of the posters a missing the point. some umc black children with very highly educated parents are specifically choosing to attend banneker but similarly-situated dc white families statistically make different choices. its worth looking at why.