Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Speaking as a South Asian woman with mixed kids, it's because the white kids exclude the non-white kids (or rather, the white parents exclude the non-white kids from a very early age), so the non-white kids feel like they have to stick together. At least this was my experience as a child, and my kids' experience, too -- even though they are the children of a South Asian mom born and raised in the midwest and a white dad. I'm as American as apple pie, but the white moms have always still excluded me. Even after talking to me and realizing I'm not an immigrant (they're scared of immigrants).
I am white and live in an area with many predominantly south Asian neighborhoods and it’s the reverse there. The few white kids in schools stick together.
Same. In my neighborhood they didn’t want to come to block parties so they made their own south Asian block parties. They also don’t join the normal moms groups and make their own. I’ve actually never met such exclusionary people and I went to school in the Deep South. Blacks and whites mingled a whole lot more there than south Asians do here. Other Asian Americans are not like that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:That’s why parents should be careful not to send their kids where they will be a below 10% minority. Unfortunately Black parents don’t have that luxury but other races should take note.
Where do you invent some total BS like that? Are you completely ignorant about the many majority AA schools in the DC area?
They are mostly very bad, I meant AA parents who are middle class and up and value education
Low income black people don’t value education?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Speaking as a South Asian woman with mixed kids, it's because the white kids exclude the non-white kids (or rather, the white parents exclude the non-white kids from a very early age), so the non-white kids feel like they have to stick together. At least this was my experience as a child, and my kids' experience, too -- even though they are the children of a South Asian mom born and raised in the midwest and a white dad. I'm as American as apple pie, but the white moms have always still excluded me. Even after talking to me and realizing I'm not an immigrant (they're scared of immigrants).
I am white and live in an area with many predominantly south Asian neighborhoods and it’s the reverse there. The few white kids in schools stick together.
Same. In my neighborhood they didn’t want to come to block parties so they made their own south Asian block parties. They also don’t join the normal moms groups and make their own. I’ve actually never met such exclusionary people and I went to school in the Deep South. Blacks and whites mingled a whole lot more there than south Asians do here. Other Asian Americans are not like that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Speaking as a South Asian woman with mixed kids, it's because the white kids exclude the non-white kids (or rather, the white parents exclude the non-white kids from a very early age), so the non-white kids feel like they have to stick together. At least this was my experience as a child, and my kids' experience, too -- even though they are the children of a South Asian mom born and raised in the midwest and a white dad. I'm as American as apple pie, but the white moms have always still excluded me. Even after talking to me and realizing I'm not an immigrant (they're scared of immigrants).
I am white and live in an area with many predominantly south Asian neighborhoods and it’s the reverse there. The few white kids in schools stick together.
Anonymous wrote:I teach at an international school in Asia, and the kids definitely self-segregate. The white expat kids stick together, the Indian expat kids have their own groups, the Korean and Japanese kids group together with each other (weirdly, these are the only nationalities that cross that line for friend groups, but only with each other and not any other nationalities), and the Chinese kids stick with their own group.
There are some exceptions to the rule, but in general, the kids self segregate. They are not mean to other groups and will happily work together in class if the teacher breaks up friend groups and mixes them, but they definitely self segregate.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:That’s why parents should be careful not to send their kids where they will be a below 10% minority. Unfortunately Black parents don’t have that luxury but other races should take note.
Where do you invent some total BS like that? Are you completely ignorant about the many majority AA schools in the DC area?
They are mostly very bad, I meant AA parents who are middle class and up and value education
Low income black people don’t value education?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:That’s why parents should be careful not to send their kids where they will be a below 10% minority. Unfortunately Black parents don’t have that luxury but other races should take note.
Where do you invent some total BS like that? Are you completely ignorant about the many majority AA schools in the DC area?
They are mostly very bad, I meant AA parents who are middle class and up and value education
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:That’s why parents should be careful not to send their kids where they will be a below 10% minority. Unfortunately Black parents don’t have that luxury but other races should take note.
Huh? DCPS is a majority-black school district. So are many in the South.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:That’s why parents should be careful not to send their kids where they will be a below 10% minority. Unfortunately Black parents don’t have that luxury but other races should take note.
Where do you invent some total BS like that? Are you completely ignorant about the many majority AA schools in the DC area?
They are mostly very bad, I meant AA parents who are middle class and up and value education
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:That’s why parents should be careful not to send their kids where they will be a below 10% minority. Unfortunately Black parents don’t have that luxury but other races should take note.
Where do you invent some total BS like that? Are you completely ignorant about the many majority AA schools in the DC area?
Anonymous wrote:Speaking as a South Asian woman with mixed kids, it's because the white kids exclude the non-white kids (or rather, the white parents exclude the non-white kids from a very early age), so the non-white kids feel like they have to stick together. At least this was my experience as a child, and my kids' experience, too -- even though they are the children of a South Asian mom born and raised in the midwest and a white dad. I'm as American as apple pie, but the white moms have always still excluded me. Even after talking to me and realizing I'm not an immigrant (they're scared of immigrants).