Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What the heck is the B at the end for? I assumed OP made a typo, but have they added yet another letter to the stupid acronym?
Belonging
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think it is really things like affinity groups, race essentialism, the white guilt complex and a skewed approach to history/social studies that make parents unhappy.
You need to take into account that many of us have now had a lot of experience with DEI programs at work, and that, as residents of DC, we have seen what some of the policy ideas mean for day-to-day life. I know a lot of workplaces all but required people to read books like White Fragility or Kendi books at some point. Those things haven’t left a positive impression, in many cases.
That's probably not true. I am familiar with a lot of places in this city and I haven't heard off anything like that. I know that there are parents here that would believe that. I have no idea why that is.
My workplace absolutely circulated a recommended reading list as part of some dumb pronouncement on a police shooting (one that was actually justified, not George Floyd) with Kendi books on it
So, if this is true, the mere reading list upset you? Nobody told you that you had to read the books. It's was just suggested and that bothered you.
That's not healthy behavior, and I'm not understanding why others aren't seeing it.
And if you are FORCED to read a book and take a test on the book that is the perogative of your employer. The employer might not want your racist a$$ in their workplace; their Black wife; the LGBTQIA CEO; the mixed raced coworker might not like your random snide comments and instead of firing you immediatly they give you grace and go "well he was raised in [insert hick state] so he might not know better. Let's up skill him like we do on a varierty of things like expense reports and sexual harassment training and then he can be a better person to be around."
When they find out you are complaining that you are learning to be a decent human being around people who don't look like you or aren't raised like you you won't need to be complaining about your employer anymore, it will be your former employer.
You don't like that your kid can't call a kid a racist name and is being taught to be a decent human being.
I have a lot of friends like you; they don't talk to their racist parents. So enjoy figuring out medicare by yourself.
NP. One reason I don’t like DEI is because of how appallingly and casually ageist its proponents are.
+1. Also, that PP was responding to me. I’m 43. And African American.![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What the heck is the B at the end for? I assumed OP made a typo, but have they added yet another letter to the stupid acronym?
Belonging
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What the heck is the B at the end for? I assumed OP made a typo, but have they added yet another letter to the stupid acronym?
Belonging
Anonymous wrote:What the heck is the B at the end for? I assumed OP made a typo, but have they added yet another letter to the stupid acronym?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think it is really things like affinity groups, race essentialism, the white guilt complex and a skewed approach to history/social studies that make parents unhappy.
You need to take into account that many of us have now had a lot of experience with DEI programs at work, and that, as residents of DC, we have seen what some of the policy ideas mean for day-to-day life. I know a lot of workplaces all but required people to read books like White Fragility or Kendi books at some point. Those things haven’t left a positive impression, in many cases.
That's probably not true. I am familiar with a lot of places in this city and I haven't heard off anything like that. I know that there are parents here that would believe that. I have no idea why that is.
My workplace absolutely circulated a recommended reading list as part of some dumb pronouncement on a police shooting (one that was actually justified, not George Floyd) with Kendi books on it
So, if this is true, the mere reading list upset you? Nobody told you that you had to read the books. It's was just suggested and that bothered you.
That's not healthy behavior, and I'm not understanding why others aren't seeing it.
And if you are FORCED to read a book and take a test on the book that is the perogative of your employer. The employer might not want your racist a$$ in their workplace; their Black wife; the LGBTQIA CEO; the mixed raced coworker might not like your random snide comments and instead of firing you immediatly they give you grace and go "well he was raised in [insert hick state] so he might not know better. Let's up skill him like we do on a varierty of things like expense reports and sexual harassment training and then he can be a better person to be around."
When they find out you are complaining that you are learning to be a decent human being around people who don't look like you or aren't raised like you you won't need to be complaining about your employer anymore, it will be your former employer.
You don't like that your kid can't call a kid a racist name and is being taught to be a decent human being.
I have a lot of friends like you; they don't talk to their racist parents. So enjoy figuring out medicare by yourself.
NP. One reason I don’t like DEI is because of how appallingly and casually ageist its proponents are.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think it is really things like affinity groups, race essentialism, the white guilt complex and a skewed approach to history/social studies that make parents unhappy.
You need to take into account that many of us have now had a lot of experience with DEI programs at work, and that, as residents of DC, we have seen what some of the policy ideas mean for day-to-day life. I know a lot of workplaces all but required people to read books like White Fragility or Kendi books at some point. Those things haven’t left a positive impression, in many cases.
That's probably not true. I am familiar with a lot of places in this city and I haven't heard off anything like that. I know that there are parents here that would believe that. I have no idea why that is.
My workplace absolutely circulated a recommended reading list as part of some dumb pronouncement on a police shooting (one that was actually justified, not George Floyd) with Kendi books on it
So, if this is true, the mere reading list upset you? Nobody told you that you had to read the books. It's was just suggested and that bothered you.
That's not healthy behavior, and I'm not understanding why others aren't seeing it.
And if you are FORCED to read a book and take a test on the book that is the perogative of your employer. The employer might not want your racist a$$ in their workplace; their Black wife; the LGBTQIA CEO; the mixed raced coworker might not like your random snide comments and instead of firing you immediatly they give you grace and go "well he was raised in [insert hick state] so he might not know better. Let's up skill him like we do on a varierty of things like expense reports and sexual harassment training and then he can be a better person to be around."
When they find out you are complaining that you are learning to be a decent human being around people who don't look like you or aren't raised like you you won't need to be complaining about your employer anymore, it will be your former employer.
You don't like that your kid can't call a kid a racist name and is being taught to be a decent human being.
I have a lot of friends like you; they don't talk to their racist parents. So enjoy figuring out medicare by yourself.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I used to think the same as you OP. I thought DEI pushback was simply racist republicans being racists.
Then I read a proposed curriculum that asserted that Mathematics’ focus on students getting correct answers was indicative of white supremacist culture. I then looked into DEI further and was shocked to discover what is creeping into public school curriculums and lesson plans.
Where was this?
check out p 66: https://equitablemath.org/wp-content/uploads/sites/2/2020/11/1_STRIDE1.pdf
“Upholding the idea that there are always right and wrong answers perpetuate objectivity as well as fear of open con- flict. Some math problems may have more than one right answer and some may not have a solution at all, depend- ing on the content and the context. And when the focus is only on getting the right answer, the complexity of the mathematical concepts and reasoning may be underdeveloped, missing opportunities for deep learning.”
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think it is really things like affinity groups, race essentialism, the white guilt complex and a skewed approach to history/social studies that make parents unhappy.
You need to take into account that many of us have now had a lot of experience with DEI programs at work, and that, as residents of DC, we have seen what some of the policy ideas mean for day-to-day life. I know a lot of workplaces all but required people to read books like White Fragility or Kendi books at some point. Those things haven’t left a positive impression, in many cases.
That's probably not true. I am familiar with a lot of places in this city and I haven't heard off anything like that. I know that there are parents here that would believe that. I have no idea why that is.
My workplace absolutely circulated a recommended reading list as part of some dumb pronouncement on a police shooting (one that was actually justified, not George Floyd) with Kendi books on it
So, if this is true, the mere reading list upset you? Nobody told you that you had to read the books. It's was just suggested and that bothered you.
That's not healthy behavior, and I'm not understanding why others aren't seeing it.
And if you are FORCED to read a book and take a test on the book that is the perogative of your employer. The employer might not want your racist a$$ in their workplace; their Black wife; the LGBTQIA CEO; the mixed raced coworker might not like your random snide comments and instead of firing you immediatly they give you grace and go "well he was raised in [insert hick state] so he might not know better. Let's up skill him like we do on a varierty of things like expense reports and sexual harassment training and then he can be a better person to be around."
When they find out you are complaining that you are learning to be a decent human being around people who don't look like you or aren't raised like you you won't need to be complaining about your employer anymore, it will be your former employer.
You don't like that your kid can't call a kid a racist name and is being taught to be a decent human being.
I have a lot of friends like you; they don't talk to their racist parents. So enjoy figuring out medicare by yourself.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't know why it's such a contentious issue with many of you. The amount of gaslighting and hyperbole that parents are buying into is disgusting and hurtful.
I have not seen a single assignment many of you claim has been included in curriculums. I would blow it off to trolls, but I've heard parents slip and admit that it will factor in their following school selection. They are so threatened by something they know nothing about.
I don't understand why.
I am liberal but against DEIB being taught in school. There’s so much nuance and it’s really tough for kids to understand so they just repeat talking points. My DD talks about white privilege but doesn’t understand what it means - just that she has it and she shouldn’t take advantage of it?! It’s all just someone’s opinion and I’d prefer that my kids have more of a classical education and learn grammar, sentence structure, etc. Frankly teaching DEIB seems lazy on the schools part - teach those kids some hard to learn curriculum!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think it is really things like affinity groups, race essentialism, the white guilt complex and a skewed approach to history/social studies that make parents unhappy.
You need to take into account that many of us have now had a lot of experience with DEI programs at work, and that, as residents of DC, we have seen what some of the policy ideas mean for day-to-day life. I know a lot of workplaces all but required people to read books like White Fragility or Kendi books at some point. Those things haven’t left a positive impression, in many cases.
That's probably not true. I am familiar with a lot of places in this city and I haven't heard off anything like that. I know that there are parents here that would believe that. I have no idea why that is.
My workplace absolutely circulated a recommended reading list as part of some dumb pronouncement on a police shooting (one that was actually justified, not George Floyd) with Kendi books on it
So, if this is true, the mere reading list upset you? Nobody told you that you had to read the books. It's was just suggested and that bothered you.
That's not healthy behavior, and I'm not understanding why others aren't seeing it.
Anonymous wrote:I don't know why it's such a contentious issue with many of you. The amount of gaslighting and hyperbole that parents are buying into is disgusting and hurtful.
I have not seen a single assignment many of you claim has been included in curriculums. I would blow it off to trolls, but I've heard parents slip and admit that it will factor in their following school selection. They are so threatened by something they know nothing about.
I don't understand why.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I used to think the same as you OP. I thought DEI pushback was simply racist republicans being racists.
Then I read a proposed curriculum that asserted that Mathematics’ focus on students getting correct answers was indicative of white supremacist culture. I then looked into DEI further and was shocked to discover what is creeping into public school curriculums and lesson plans.
This also isn't true. But again, I'm sure there are a lot of families that would believe it. Why are they falling for it?
Probably because they see evidence of it in their own schools? A lot of people tried these schools and pulled their kids out based on what they actually observed. But keep pretending that people are just majorly inconveniencing themselves and switching schools for not reason.