Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't know where I come out on this issue, because it is nuanced and complicated. But I am absolutely certain that most of you are bitter cowards, so insecure about your own choices and what may come that you find nothing at all odd about posting anonymously on DCUM.
No one makes you feel any way; that's on you. If Joe or anyone else judged you for sending your kid to a charter and it bothers you (still) many years later then the issue is you, not him. If you are certain of your own choices then what one man had to say should have washed off you like water off a duck's back.
You are all kind of missing the point here; he's acknowledging that this is a hard choice. That it forces reconciliation of public policy vs reality. That it requires preteens to help make real world decisions that have possible lifelong impacts.
I can't tell if you are bothered by his lack of certainty? His certainty? It's confusing.
I am not an elected official. I don't have to put myself out there and let the likes of you (and me) take shots, or act like there are easy answers, or have my preteen kids used as checkers pieces in a silly forum. People who do are to be commended. You know what elected officials don't usually worry about? People who sit at home in judgment on anonymous chat boards. You people aren't going to run against them. Or vote. Or canvas for better candidates. Your howling at the wind doesn't accomplish much.
I'm sure Joe appreciates you all helping him to understand what his daughter thinks. Or helpfully suggesting that she should be allowed to participate. I'm certain that the only feedback he received from his daughter was the two lines in the Post article. And that it hasn't occurred to him to consider (or discount) what his daughter thinks. Thank heavens for you insightful people.
Most of the people posting on here are trolls; I get it. You people are amusing. But there are people chiming in here who truly think they are adding something to the discussion, or providing unique views or considerations to the Wheedon family. I feel sorry for that group of people.
I don't think most are trolls on here. Several of us have commented about Joe and Amy's words and disdain after we were faced with the same choices, just with older kids and before they did. IMHO we aren't being any harder on him than he was on us.
Right, it is a hard decision. But when lots of other people were going through the exact same thing, he did not acknowledge that it was a hard decision and was fiercely critical, both generally and specifically to particular people, who wrestled with the hard decision and came out the way he didn't prefer - at least for other people's kids.
If he had always acknowledged it was a hard decision, people wouldn't be annoyed now.
Anonymous wrote:The valedictorian at Eastern last year had a full ride to Duke.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't know where I come out on this issue, because it is nuanced and complicated. But I am absolutely certain that most of you are bitter cowards, so insecure about your own choices and what may come that you find nothing at all odd about posting anonymously on DCUM.
No one makes you feel any way; that's on you. If Joe or anyone else judged you for sending your kid to a charter and it bothers you (still) many years later then the issue is you, not him. If you are certain of your own choices then what one man had to say should have washed off you like water off a duck's back.
You are all kind of missing the point here; he's acknowledging that this is a hard choice. That it forces reconciliation of public policy vs reality. That it requires preteens to help make real world decisions that have possible lifelong impacts.
I can't tell if you are bothered by his lack of certainty? His certainty? It's confusing.
I am not an elected official. I don't have to put myself out there and let the likes of you (and me) take shots, or act like there are easy answers, or have my preteen kids used as checkers pieces in a silly forum. People who do are to be commended. You know what elected officials don't usually worry about? People who sit at home in judgment on anonymous chat boards. You people aren't going to run against them. Or vote. Or canvas for better candidates. Your howling at the wind doesn't accomplish much.
I'm sure Joe appreciates you all helping him to understand what his daughter thinks. Or helpfully suggesting that she should be allowed to participate. I'm certain that the only feedback he received from his daughter was the two lines in the Post article. And that it hasn't occurred to him to consider (or discount) what his daughter thinks. Thank heavens for you insightful people.
Most of the people posting on here are trolls; I get it. You people are amusing. But there are people chiming in here who truly think they are adding something to the discussion, or providing unique views or considerations to the Wheedon family. I feel sorry for that group of people.
I don't think most are trolls on here. Several of us have commented about Joe and Amy's words and disdain after we were faced with the same choices, just with older kids and before they did. IMHO we aren't being any harder on him than he was on us.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m not a troll. I teach in dcps & hate this kinda reverse field of dreams crap he & others peddle. If you come- they will build it. It breeds bossy ES parents who think they are ‘transforming’ dcps with STEM & aftercare. Then- when we really need them- they bail.
OK, so what does DCPS "really" need?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s one thing to criticize Mr. Weedon if his child was going to elementary or even middle school and he lotteries his child outside of his IB school. But the article makes it sound like this is what his rising high schooler wants. He should take his daughter’s opinion into consideration when making a choice about schools. That’s what a good parent would do even if it goes against your policy preferences.
The article clearly indicated that his daughter would prefer Eastern:
"Malia — a confident, self-described nerd — said she would rather go to Eastern and commute by foot each day. "
OMG. Good catch; I forgot that in all the posts. But didn’t she also say she worried about the education?
Yes. It wasn’t a quote but the article said she wanted a row challenging academic experience than she had at EH.
So, if the daughter wants to go to a school outside of their boundary, how does that make Weedon a hypocrite? Are posters on here suggesting that he should force his daughter, a high school student, to go to Eastern to “keep it real”? Because that’s stupid. And that quote from Malia just shows that’s she torn about being separated from her community school and friends but the rest of the article suggests she wanted to go to a more challenging school.
What you’re missing is that Weedon did this, over and over again to others.
I don't know Joe Weedon but he sounds just like someone we have WOTP - Rachel Laser. She lectured us on white privilege, white atonement, white fragility, "equity", and the supposed evils of tracking (i.e., honors classes), and then shoved the ludicrous "Honors for All" down Wilson High School's throat and wrapped it "equity" to squash discussion. To top it off, she sends her child to the $40k/year private Georgetown Day School (GDS) instead of Wilson which is akin to a super strong version of tracking. You can't make this shit up. These people have no shame.
Anonymous wrote:I’m not a troll. I teach in dcps & hate this kinda reverse field of dreams crap he & others peddle. If you come- they will build it. It breeds bossy ES parents who think they are ‘transforming’ dcps with STEM & aftercare. Then- when we really need them- they bail.
Anonymous wrote:I don't know where I come out on this issue, because it is nuanced and complicated. But I am absolutely certain that most of you are bitter cowards, so insecure about your own choices and what may come that you find nothing at all odd about posting anonymously on DCUM.
No one makes you feel any way; that's on you. If Joe or anyone else judged you for sending your kid to a charter and it bothers you (still) many years later then the issue is you, not him. If you are certain of your own choices then what one man had to say should have washed off you like water off a duck's back.
You are all kind of missing the point here; he's acknowledging that this is a hard choice. That it forces reconciliation of public policy vs reality. That it requires preteens to help make real world decisions that have possible lifelong impacts.
I can't tell if you are bothered by his lack of certainty? His certainty? It's confusing.
I am not an elected official. I don't have to put myself out there and let the likes of you (and me) take shots, or act like there are easy answers, or have my preteen kids used as checkers pieces in a silly forum. People who do are to be commended. You know what elected officials don't usually worry about? People who sit at home in judgment on anonymous chat boards. You people aren't going to run against them. Or vote. Or canvas for better candidates. Your howling at the wind doesn't accomplish much.
I'm sure Joe appreciates you all helping him to understand what his daughter thinks. Or helpfully suggesting that she should be allowed to participate. I'm certain that the only feedback he received from his daughter was the two lines in the Post article. And that it hasn't occurred to him to consider (or discount) what his daughter thinks. Thank heavens for you insightful people.
Most of the people posting on here are trolls; I get it. You people are amusing. But there are people chiming in here who truly think they are adding something to the discussion, or providing unique views or considerations to the Wheedon family. I feel sorry for that group of people.
Anonymous wrote:The valedictorian at Eastern last year had a full ride to Duke.