Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For GDS to move forward, it needs to focus
Resolve the real estate issue in the next six months
Restore institutional leadership on social issues by September. School can not start as it ended.
Focus on schools current needs rather than a reputational competition with other schools
=1. GDS needs to get rid of the real estate albatross ASAP. It's not their core competency, and they need to concentrate on addressing the school issues. Seeing the head of school and his leadership team pitching the PUD in public forums reminds me of the people who buy "The Art of the Deal" and attend a Trump University seminar and then try to act like big time real estate players.
Anonymous wrote:For GDS to move forward, it needs to focus
Resolve the real estate issue in the next six months
Restore institutional leadership on social issues by September. School can not start as it ended.
Focus on schools current needs rather than a reputational competition with other schools
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:pAnonymous wrote:I think GDS is learning that talk is cheap. You can talk all you want about diversity and inclusion -- both the worthiest of goals -- but making it happen requires more than talk. It is hard work.
GDS HS parent here. I believe this statement is correct, and that GDS admin was stunned that there could be racism when there is so much focus on diversity. I've been a GDS parent for many years, and I always felt that their approach to diversity was focused on AA and LGBTQ at the expense of understanding it in broader terms of basic humanity, empathy for anyone facing challenges. My kid tells me it's important to focus on structural injustice because it is the worst. But I believe injustice starts at a more basic level with unkindness, and grows from there.
There is far less bitchiness and bullying at the HS than there are at most schools (or at least at my high school) and that may be why the admin was caught off guard by how racism could be a problem. But I also think the reaction of the school (to the discovery that some students experienced bias and worse at school) was immediate and soul-searching and my high-schooler learned a hell of a lot about society during that week of school-wide focus on the problem (though the academic setback that week took a toll.)
GDS parent. You are not a minority. That was not the experience of URM at GDS. They complained to deaf ears for years and then were badly shaken by the events of this spring. This spring was not healing, good or a growth experience for many URM students. It was PAINFUL and it is unfortunate .that you and the admin do not recognize the children's pain.
Anonymous wrote:pAnonymous wrote:I think GDS is learning that talk is cheap. You can talk all you want about diversity and inclusion -- both the worthiest of goals -- but making it happen requires more than talk. It is hard work.
GDS HS parent here. I believe this statement is correct, and that GDS admin was stunned that there could be racism when there is so much focus on diversity. I've been a GDS parent for many years, and I always felt that their approach to diversity was focused on AA and LGBTQ at the expense of understanding it in broader terms of basic humanity, empathy for anyone facing challenges. My kid tells me it's important to focus on structural injustice because it is the worst. But I believe injustice starts at a more basic level with unkindness, and grows from there.
There is far less bitchiness and bullying at the HS than there are at most schools (or at least at my high school) and that may be why the admin was caught off guard by how racism could be a problem. But I also think the reaction of the school (to the discovery that some students experienced bias and worse at school) was immediate and soul-searching and my high-schooler learned a hell of a lot about society during that week of school-wide focus on the problem (though the academic setback that week took a toll.)
Anonymous wrote:Though it probably precludes some development strategies.
Anonymous wrote:pAnonymous wrote:I think GDS is learning that talk is cheap. You can talk all you want about diversity and inclusion -- both the worthiest of goals -- but making it happen requires more than talk. It is hard work.
GDS HS parent here. I believe this statement is correct, and that GDS admin was stunned that there could be racism when there is so much focus on diversity. I've been a GDS parent for many years, and I always felt that their approach to diversity was focused on AA and LGBTQ at the expense of understanding it in broader terms of basic humanity, empathy for anyone facing challenges. My kid tells me it's important to focus on structural injustice because it is the worst. But I believe injustice starts at a more basic level with unkindness, and grows from there.
There is far less bitchiness and bullying at the HS than there are at most schools (or at least at my high school) and that may be why the admin was caught off guard by how racism could be a problem. But I also think the reaction of the school (to the discovery that some students experienced bias and worse at school) was immediate and soul-searching and my high-schooler learned a hell of a lot about society during that week of school-wide focus on the problem (though the academic setback that week took a toll.)