Anonymous wrote:I have to say I am a little bit repulsed by the parents in my neighborhood who unabashedly point to the English Language Learner (ELL) population at Bruce-Monroe and the number of non-white students and think that they are listing good reasons not to send their (presumably white) children to the school. I admit that the test scores are not good, which you would expect from a large ELL population taking English standardized tests. That doesn't mean that your child is going to score poorly if you send them there. From what I have seen of the school, the instruction is superb, the staff work hard to bring in wonderful programming, including partnerships with DC Ballet, DC United (Soccer) and the DC symphony.
Ultimately, it is a problem that BMPV does not have any non-Hispanic white students, but it's a problem for our community and not an indicator that the school is bad. I think judging a school solely based on its demographic profile is pretty deplorable, and we should all be ashamed to make our decisions in this way because it does real harm to our community and de-values our neighborhood school and its dedicated teachers and families.
Anonymous wrote:I'm looking for a DC Pubic Charter that has a PK2 program... anyone have a clue?
Anonymous wrote:Back to the thread discussion about Spanish Immersion/Bilingual schools; does anyone have any insight on DC Bilingual Public Charter Schools (CentroNia)? I tried to email them about Open Houses and lottery applications but the email bounced.
We hope we can get into Mundo Verde; my coworker's daughter was in the inaugural PreK4 class and she loves it. She did not have any Spanish exposure but can now hold simple conversations. We are not holding our breath though because we heard that last year they had 900 applications for 15 slots.
Good luck to all and thanks very much-
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Right, look very carefully at the % low income students. LAMB is low (24%) while Bancroft is high (80%), and this is reflected in the scores. This is what determines scores, people.
Please be careful in your statement, just because a school has a high srudent population of low income doesn't mean the scores are going to be low...
Anonymous wrote:Right, look very carefully at the % low income students. LAMB is low (24%) while Bancroft is high (80%), and this is reflected in the scores. This is what determines scores, people.
Anonymous wrote:What type of Chinese characters does YY emphasize? There is my ignorance, I didn't know there was any other kind of character for Mandarin Chinese than traditional... what other kind is there and what does YY teach?