frankly its the parents who don't sound very resilient.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
seriously -- these people show no resilience at all. I wonder what would happen if they had to deal with real hardship.....
Try immigrating to a country with no education, not knowing the language and raising four little children, then having those kids become educated with good paying jobs. Then report back on dealing with "real hardships".
--signed an Asian immigrant whose family fits that bill
DP. Yes, those are real hardships. Not getting into a middle-school magnet program is not. I'm glad that we agree.
Exactly
Then why mention about how not getting into MS magnet means those kids can't deal with any hardships? What makes people think these kids aren't resilient just because their parents feels that these kids weren't treated fairly by MCPS?
I can tell you that not being treated fairly does the opposite of what you think -- it makes you more resilient. That doesn't mean that it's a good thing that these kids were treated unfairly. Whenever anyone is treated unfairly, there is something wrong in the system.
Anonymous wrote:
Then why mention about how not getting into MS magnet means those kids can't deal with any hardships? What makes people think these kids aren't resilient just because their parents feels that these kids weren't treated fairly by MCPS?
I can tell you that not being treated fairly does the opposite of what you think -- it makes you more resilient. That doesn't mean that it's a good thing that these kids were treated unfairly. Whenever anyone is treated unfairly, there is something wrong in the system.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
seriously -- these people show no resilience at all. I wonder what would happen if they had to deal with real hardship.....
Try immigrating to a country with no education, not knowing the language and raising four little children, then having those kids become educated with good paying jobs. Then report back on dealing with "real hardships".
--signed an Asian immigrant whose family fits that bill
DP. Yes, those are real hardships. Not getting into a middle-school magnet program is not. I'm glad that we agree.
Exactly
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
seriously -- these people show no resilience at all. I wonder what would happen if they had to deal with real hardship.....
Try immigrating to a country with no education, not knowing the language and raising four little children, then having those kids become educated with good paying jobs. Then report back on dealing with "real hardships".
--signed an Asian immigrant whose family fits that bill
DP. Yes, those are real hardships. Not getting into a middle-school magnet program is not. I'm glad that we agree.
Exactly
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
seriously -- these people show no resilience at all. I wonder what would happen if they had to deal with real hardship.....
Try immigrating to a country with no education, not knowing the language and raising four little children, then having those kids become educated with good paying jobs. Then report back on dealing with "real hardships".
--signed an Asian immigrant whose family fits that bill
DP. Yes, those are real hardships. Not getting into a middle-school magnet program is not. I'm glad that we agree.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Clearly, they're not publishing this data because some blithering moron would go on DCUM and whine about how their kid's spot was taken by a URM with a 0.0001 lower test score despite the decision being more nuanced.
BINGO. The same folks who have been saying for years that East County schools are hellholes are now going to dither over .0002 percentage points between their well-prepared and well-supported kid and a kid who didn't have their child's advantages.
0.0002 percentage points or 40?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
seriously -- these people show no resilience at all. I wonder what would happen if they had to deal with real hardship.....
Try immigrating to a country with no education, not knowing the language and raising four little children, then having those kids become educated with good paying jobs. Then report back on dealing with "real hardships".
--signed an Asian immigrant whose family fits that bill
Anonymous wrote:AS students are succeeding because of their home life and their parents. That kind of parenting will never happen in AA and HI households. They have too many social, mental and cultural issues that bring them down, putting energy towards educating their kids is low down on their priorities. They are struggling as family units on very basic issues.
MCPS can give them everything except change their homelife and switch out their parents. They will always be at a disadvantage. It is the effect of historic slavery and breakdown of family units for generations. We cannot understand this level of dysfunction. The difference between AA blacks and African blacks who have immigrated here is of day and night.