Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:jsteele wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Please do, since I'm already seeing this study get trotted out on neighborhood facebook as great scholarship.
I am considering writing a response. One irony I guess is that the report will probably generate more traffic to DCUM. Hopefully it won't be a bunch of racists coming to find out how to get into an all white school.
The racists would quickly discover that there aren't any all-white public schools in the DC system, not even close.
Um, doesn’t Janney come close, for one?
Yes, if by “all-white” you mean reflecting national averages.
It's a bit more. "White students, on average, attend a school in which 69% of the students are white" - from "Harming Our Common Future: America's Segregated Schools 65 Years after Brown".
At Janney, it's 74%, and the next-biggest group is Multiracial, which I would guess is also different.
Anonymous wrote:jsteele wrote:Another huge flaw. On page 23 there is a section specifically looking at Brookland. It says this:
The conversations about Brookland schools on DC Urban Moms illustrate one mechanism by which this self-segregation occurs. Nearly three thousand forum conversations, almost one-fifth of the total, mention at least one Brookland elementary school, and total attention to these schools has grown over time. But DC Urban Moms participants focus heavily on a few schools in the neighborhood. On average, elementary schools in Brookland that are less than 50 percent Black are mentioned more than four times as often per year as schools that are more than 50 percent Black. Figure 8 plots this correlation.
On the face of it, this supports the argument that DCUMers are a bunch of Klan members. But, then look at which schools are being discussed. The frequently-mentioned schools are all charters. Charters are open to students regardless of where they live in the District. So, any of our posters might be interested in those schools. The less-talked-about schools are public and therefore have residency restrictions. Fewer of our posters have a reason to discuss those schools.
This data simply cannot be taken seriously.
Except that in Brookland, most of the in-bounds schools have enough open spaces to accept many if not most external applicants, so, while I totally and completely agree that this study is terrible, this particular point doesn't quite hold up.
Anonymous wrote:there are many instances when white people will choose segregation over a better school.
When certain suburbs and schools become too asian, white people move out:
https://psmag.com/news/ghosts-of-white-people-past-witnessing-white-flight-from-an-asian-ethnoburb
Many of the "highly regarded" charter schools east-of-the-park are objectively worse than the DCPS schools in the same neighborhoods, but are (or were) whiter. White parents move their kids there to be with other white kids.
I think it's reasonable to question why white parents don't encourage their kids to apply to Bannaker...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:jsteele wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Please do, since I'm already seeing this study get trotted out on neighborhood facebook as great scholarship.
I am considering writing a response. One irony I guess is that the report will probably generate more traffic to DCUM. Hopefully it won't be a bunch of racists coming to find out how to get into an all white school.
The racists would quickly discover that there aren't any all-white public schools in the DC system, not even close.
Um, doesn’t Janney come close, for one?
Yes, if by “all-white” you mean reflecting national averages.
jsteele wrote:Another huge flaw. On page 23 there is a section specifically looking at Brookland. It says this:
The conversations about Brookland schools on DC Urban Moms illustrate one mechanism by which this self-segregation occurs. Nearly three thousand forum conversations, almost one-fifth of the total, mention at least one Brookland elementary school, and total attention to these schools has grown over time. But DC Urban Moms participants focus heavily on a few schools in the neighborhood. On average, elementary schools in Brookland that are less than 50 percent Black are mentioned more than four times as often per year as schools that are more than 50 percent Black. Figure 8 plots this correlation.
On the face of it, this supports the argument that DCUMers are a bunch of Klan members. But, then look at which schools are being discussed. The frequently-mentioned schools are all charters. Charters are open to students regardless of where they live in the District. So, any of our posters might be interested in those schools. The less-talked-about schools are public and therefore have residency restrictions. Fewer of our posters have a reason to discuss those schools.
This data simply cannot be taken seriously.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:jsteele wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Please do, since I'm already seeing this study get trotted out on neighborhood facebook as great scholarship.
I am considering writing a response. One irony I guess is that the report will probably generate more traffic to DCUM. Hopefully it won't be a bunch of racists coming to find out how to get into an all white school.
The racists would quickly discover that there aren't any all-white public schools in the DC system, not even close.
Um, doesn’t Janney come close, for one?
Yes, if by “all-white” you mean reflecting national averages.
Anonymous wrote:jsteele wrote:This is their conclusion:
The conversations on DC Urban Moms illustrate what other research has also shown: When privileged parents choose, they tend to choose segregation
This is an extremely unfair characterization that completely misses the nuanced and complex reality. It is extremely disappointing to see such drivel presented as serious research.
I think the articles conclusion is offensive. We are a Black family in NE DC... we are not choosing segregation by ranking our lottery list the way that is best for our child
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:That is so off the mark it should be career ending. There is so much about DC schools that merits fascinating research and real scholarship. Instead, they picked a conclusion and pretended to grab quotes to support their own bias.
I cant believe Brookings would put its name on this
The conversations about Brookland schools on DC Urban Moms illustrate one mechanism by which this self-segregation occurs. Nearly three thousand forum conversations, almost one-fifth of the total, mention at least one Brookland elementary school, and total attention to these schools has grown over time. But DC Urban Moms participants focus heavily on a few schools in the neighborhood. On average, elementary schools in Brookland that are less than 50 percent Black are mentioned more than four times as often per year as schools that are more than 50 percent Black. Figure 8 plots this correlation.
Burroughs, for example, has Math and English proficiency scores similar to Lee Montessori, but Lee is mentioned three times as often.
Anonymous wrote:That is so off the mark it should be career ending. There is so much about DC schools that merits fascinating research and real scholarship. Instead, they picked a conclusion and pretended to grab quotes to support their own bias.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:jsteele wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Please do, since I'm already seeing this study get trotted out on neighborhood facebook as great scholarship.
I am considering writing a response. One irony I guess is that the report will probably generate more traffic to DCUM. Hopefully it won't be a bunch of racists coming to find out how to get into an all white school.
The racists would quickly discover that there aren't any all-white public schools in the DC system, not even close.
Um, doesn’t Janney come close, for one?
Anonymous wrote:jsteele wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Please do, since I'm already seeing this study get trotted out on neighborhood facebook as great scholarship.
I am considering writing a response. One irony I guess is that the report will probably generate more traffic to DCUM. Hopefully it won't be a bunch of racists coming to find out how to get into an all white school.
The racists would quickly discover that there aren't any all-white public schools in the DC system, not even close.
jsteele wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Please do, since I'm already seeing this study get trotted out on neighborhood facebook as great scholarship.
I am considering writing a response. One irony I guess is that the report will probably generate more traffic to DCUM. Hopefully it won't be a bunch of racists coming to find out how to get into an all white school.
Of all the substantive terms we counted on any topic, the single most common was “in-bound,” which appeared in nearly two-thirds of all conversations in the forum.