Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My take on the language choice of Japanese is that there are no schools or classes, public or private, offered within DC's boundaries geared toward elementary school aged children. Japanese would be another language choice for DC parents. Also, there are kids classes, schools, and programs in DC for all the languages mentioned in this thread geared toward the non-native speaker. If a parent wanted their children to learn Arabic, Chinese, French, or Spanish in DC, there are options. I cannot speak about the number of available seats at the Hebrew school. Maybe there are other issues at play. I think Japanese and Korean are interesting language choices to introduce to DC parents. By the way, Japanese is identified as a Critical Needs language.
So start a Japanese language school with afternoon and weekend classes. The fact that there are none at the moment speaks volumes about the demand for such classes...
This gives you an idea of demand for Japanese kids classes. This school is not the only one that has waitlist.
http://jcfourseasons.com/summer_session
http://jcfourseasons.com/fall_session
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My take on the language choice of Japanese is that there are no schools or classes, public or private, offered within DC's boundaries geared toward elementary school aged children. Japanese would be another language choice for DC parents. Also, there are kids classes, schools, and programs in DC for all the languages mentioned in this thread geared toward the non-native speaker. If a parent wanted their children to learn Arabic, Chinese, French, or Spanish in DC, there are options. I cannot speak about the number of available seats at the Hebrew school. Maybe there are other issues at play. I think Japanese and Korean are interesting language choices to introduce to DC parents. By the way, Japanese is identified as a Critical Needs language.
So start a Japanese language school with afternoon and weekend classes. The fact that there are none at the moment speaks volumes about the demand for such classes...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm a white, high SES resident of Ward six with an infant (so, basically, the demographic you are asking about). I would come to a school in Ward 7 for Spanish or Arabic and maybe French as long as it was well-run and had strong teachers. I wouldn't bother for a language like Japanese. Its too hard to learn and not useful enough.
+1
Frankly, we need more Chinese.
Anonymous wrote:My take on the language choice of Japanese is that there are no schools or classes, public or private, offered within DC's boundaries geared toward elementary school aged children. Japanese would be another language choice for DC parents. Also, there are kids classes, schools, and programs in DC for all the languages mentioned in this thread geared toward the non-native speaker. If a parent wanted their children to learn Arabic, Chinese, French, or Spanish in DC, there are options. I cannot speak about the number of available seats at the Hebrew school. Maybe there are other issues at play. I think Japanese and Korean are interesting language choices to introduce to DC parents. By the way, Japanese is identified as a Critical Needs language.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Other languages may be in greater demand but it is a demand that is generally filled. The Japanese demand, while smaller, is there. I think it is an underserved niche in this area.
LAMB, YY, and MV have literally hundreds of names on their respective WLs. The demand is demonstrably nowhere near filled.
Anonymous wrote:am similar to Ward 6 PP; would go for Arabic or Chinese, but not Japanese (and I do most of my business with Japan and Korea).
Anonymous wrote:just make sure they don't try to use the RosettaStone as that other would-be charter tried. How ridiculous!Anonymous wrote:Second Arabic over Japanese. Huge need.
just make sure they don't try to use the RosettaStone as that other would-be charter tried. How ridiculous!Anonymous wrote:Second Arabic over Japanese. Huge need.
Anonymous wrote:I'm a white, high SES resident of Ward six with an infant (so, basically, the demographic you are asking about). I would come to a school in Ward 7 for Spanish or Arabic and maybe French as long as it was well-run and had strong teachers. I wouldn't bother for a language like Japanese. Its too hard to learn and not useful enough.