Anonymous wrote:I'm inclined to agree but think it's a shame that Latin hasn't moved to create an economy of scale with one high school for both Latins. The DCPCSB/Latin Board and management entity could offer more serious academics at one non-selective high school than at two.
Anonymous wrote:10:04, you don’t need to keep spreading your vitriol. You don’t tutor dci kids and you have no idea how they scored. My child has graduated and earned the biliteracy seal, and a very high IB score. We don’t speak Chinese at home, nor did we engage with dubious camps or even more sketchy self-proclaimed tutors. My child was highly motivated to learn thanks to their excellent teachers and a school culture that valued and supported language learning.
Anonymous wrote:I can't see how giving YY families a preference for Latin Cooper's middle school/high school would help or hurt Mandarin learning at YY or DCI.
I also can't see it happening. No way, the DCPSCB won't sign off on the preference.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Chinese at DCI deserves to be on life support. The academics at both YY and DCI are lackluster, including the Mandarin. When most of the parents jump on board YY more for a school with an at-risk participation in the single digits than for the language immersion, what can we expect 8-12 years later at DCI? Great results and many kids still on board? Obviously not.
If YY gets the two middle school feeds, Latin Cooper will accrue the benefit. Sounds like win-win.
Its not fair to kids NOT in the YY feeder to get a shot at Latin. Why should kids get a select few slots into YY, then slide into Latin if they were never serious about chinese to begin with.
Because the arrangement would be great for both YY and Latin, co-located on the same campus in the future. No need for the DCPCSB to cut off its nose to spite its face on this one. DC hasn't been serious about Chinese to begin with. Parents can't be blamed. YY's leadership asked the city for a preference for native speakers way back in 2009. They were denied. With hardly any native speakers, Chinese at YY can't work well.
This is nonsense. The whole reason YY requested a charter for DCI was for kids to continue their Chinese studies. They can’t suddenly pivot and say we don’t care about Chinese.
The reality is that's what at least half of them already do. They leave for BASIS or the Latins after 4th grade or other middle schools not teaching partial immersion Chinese.
As a YY parent with a 10th grader and 7th grader at DCI, and a 5th grader at YY, you are fully full of BS to say "at least half of YY students leave for BASIS or Latin in 5th grade". WAY MORE THAN HALF of YY's graduating 5th graders go on to DCI.
YES, some families absolutely leave YY for BASIS and Latin, but WAY more than half actually go on to DCI for 6th grade.
Post your data and sources on this supposed mass migration away from DCI, or since you can't because it's not true, take your lies somewhere else.
Also, it's astonishing how long this BS narrative about "Chinese not working at YY" or the lack of a significant # of native speaking students means the rest of the students aren't learning Mandarin. YY has worked it's institutional butt off to have native speaking TEACHERS and guess what? When you spend 100% of PK3 & PK4 class time learning in Mandarin from native speakers, and then you spend 50% of class time in all subjects learning and speaking, reading and writing in Mandarin from K-5, YOU LEARN MANDARIN. Is it perfect, are you fluent, and can you speak, read and write equally well? Usually NO. But you do speak, understand, and usually read and write it, and most YY parents (including the ones with no outside Mandarin supports for their kids) hear over and over from native Mandarin speakers who have nothing to do with YY that their kid's Mandarin is very good if not excellent.
DCI only exists because of YY founders starting the conversation to develop a MS and HS language-focused pathway in DC for kids, including Mandarin. Arguments for YY parents not caring about Mandarin or Mandarin being canceled from DCI are ridiculous.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Chinese at DCI deserves to be on life support. The academics at both YY and DCI are lackluster, including the Mandarin. When most of the parents jump on board YY more for a school with an at-risk participation in the single digits than for the language immersion, what can we expect 8-12 years later at DCI? Great results and many kids still on board? Obviously not.
If YY gets the two middle school feeds, Latin Cooper will accrue the benefit. Sounds like win-win.
Its not fair to kids NOT in the YY feeder to get a shot at Latin. Why should kids get a select few slots into YY, then slide into Latin if they were never serious about chinese to begin with.
Because the arrangement would be great for both YY and Latin, co-located on the same campus in the future. No need for the DCPCSB to cut off its nose to spite its face on this one. DC hasn't been serious about Chinese to begin with. Parents can't be blamed. YY's leadership asked the city for a preference for native speakers way back in 2009. They were denied. With hardly any native speakers, Chinese at YY can't work well.
This is nonsense. The whole reason YY requested a charter for DCI was for kids to continue their Chinese studies. They can’t suddenly pivot and say we don’t care about Chinese.
The reality is that's what at least half of them already do. They leave for BASIS or the Latins after 4th grade or other middle schools not teaching partial immersion Chinese.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Chinese at DCI deserves to be on life support. The academics at both YY and DCI are lackluster, including the Mandarin. When most of the parents jump on board YY more for a school with an at-risk participation in the single digits than for the language immersion, what can we expect 8-12 years later at DCI? Great results and many kids still on board? Obviously not.
If YY gets the two middle school feeds, Latin Cooper will accrue the benefit. Sounds like win-win.
Its not fair to kids NOT in the YY feeder to get a shot at Latin. Why should kids get a select few slots into YY, then slide into Latin if they were never serious about chinese to begin with.
Because the arrangement would be great for both YY and Latin, co-located on the same campus in the future. No need for the DCPCSB to cut off its nose to spite its face on this one. DC hasn't been serious about Chinese to begin with. Parents can't be blamed. YY's leadership asked the city for a preference for native speakers way back in 2009. They were denied. With hardly any native speakers, Chinese at YY can't work well.
So shut down YY since you said Chinese “can’t work well” since there are so few natives speakers at the school. Why does DCI even offer Chinese when there is more demand than capacity for Spanish seats? Sorry , just cause some 3 year hit the lottery jackpot and got into YY, doesn’t mean they get TWO choices for two of the most coveted charter schools for middle and high.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Chinese at DCI deserves to be on life support. The academics at both YY and DCI are lackluster, including the Mandarin. When most of the parents jump on board YY more for a school with an at-risk participation in the single digits than for the language immersion, what can we expect 8-12 years later at DCI? Great results and many kids still on board? Obviously not.
If YY gets the two middle school feeds, Latin Cooper will accrue the benefit. Sounds like win-win.
Its not fair to kids NOT in the YY feeder to get a shot at Latin. Why should kids get a select few slots into YY, then slide into Latin if they were never serious about chinese to begin with.
Because the arrangement would be great for both YY and Latin, co-located on the same campus in the future. No need for the DCPCSB to cut off its nose to spite its face on this one. DC hasn't been serious about Chinese to begin with. Parents can't be blamed. YY's leadership asked the city for a preference for native speakers way back in 2009. They were denied. With hardly any native speakers, Chinese at YY can't work well.
This is nonsense. The whole reason YY requested a charter for DCI was for kids to continue their Chinese studies. They can’t suddenly pivot and say we don’t care about Chinese.
The reality is that's what at least half of them already do. They leave for BASIS or the Latins after 4th grade or other middle schools not teaching partial immersion Chinese.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Chinese at DCI deserves to be on life support. The academics at both YY and DCI are lackluster, including the Mandarin. When most of the parents jump on board YY more for a school with an at-risk participation in the single digits than for the language immersion, what can we expect 8-12 years later at DCI? Great results and many kids still on board? Obviously not.
If YY gets the two middle school feeds, Latin Cooper will accrue the benefit. Sounds like win-win.
Its not fair to kids NOT in the YY feeder to get a shot at Latin. Why should kids get a select few slots into YY, then slide into Latin if they were never serious about chinese to begin with.
Because the arrangement would be great for both YY and Latin, co-located on the same campus in the future. No need for the DCPCSB to cut off its nose to spite its face on this one. DC hasn't been serious about Chinese to begin with. Parents can't be blamed. YY's leadership asked the city for a preference for native speakers way back in 2009. They were denied. With hardly any native speakers, Chinese at YY can't work well.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Chinese at DCI deserves to be on life support. The academics at both YY and DCI are lackluster, including the Mandarin. When most of the parents jump on board YY more for a school with an at-risk participation in the single digits than for the language immersion, what can we expect 8-12 years later at DCI? Great results and many kids still on board? Obviously not.
If YY gets the two middle school feeds, Latin Cooper will accrue the benefit. Sounds like win-win.
Its not fair to kids NOT in the YY feeder to get a shot at Latin. Why should kids get a select few slots into YY, then slide into Latin if they were never serious about chinese to begin with.
Because the arrangement would be great for both YY and Latin, co-located on the same campus in the future. No need for the DCPCSB to cut off its nose to spite its face on this one. DC hasn't been serious about Chinese to begin with. Parents can't be blamed. YY's leadership asked the city for a preference for native speakers way back in 2009. They were denied. With hardly any native speakers, Chinese at YY can't work well.
This is nonsense. The whole reason YY requested a charter for DCI was for kids to continue their Chinese studies. They can’t suddenly pivot and say we don’t care about Chinese.