Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP - It would help to know why you are asking the question.
I am Asian American with Asian American children and am looking at independent schools in the NW DC area. I have observed that many schools here, while claiming to be committed to "diversity," seem to uphold a version of diversity that in practice is really a surprisingly antiquated version that focuses almost exclusively on black-white relations. I would like to find a school that fairly aggressively diversifies its student body (and faculty and staff) to include more Asian Americans, Hispanic Americans, and other kinds of ethicities. In other words, I would like to see a school that actually walks the walk of diversity, rather than simply talks the talk. FWIW, we are transplants from the West Coast.
So basically you don't want your kids around blacks.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP - It would help to know why you are asking the question.
I am Asian American with Asian American children and am looking at independent schools in the NW DC area. I have observed that many schools here, while claiming to be committed to "diversity," seem to uphold a version of diversity that in practice is really a surprisingly antiquated version that focuses almost exclusively on black-white relations. I would like to find a school that fairly aggressively diversifies its student body (and faculty and staff) to include more Asian Americans, Hispanic Americans, and other kinds of ethicities. In other words, I would like to see a school that actually walks the walk of diversity, rather than simply talks the talk. FWIW, we are transplants from the West Coast.
try the Cathedral school. they walk the walk. good luck!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP - It would help to know why you are asking the question.
I am Asian American with Asian American children and am looking at independent schools in the NW DC area. I have observed that many schools here, while claiming to be committed to "diversity," seem to uphold a version of diversity that in practice is really a surprisingly antiquated version that focuses almost exclusively on black-white relations. I would like to find a school that fairly aggressively diversifies its student body (and faculty and staff) to include more Asian Americans, Hispanic Americans, and other kinds of ethicities. In other words, I would like to see a school that actually walks the walk of diversity, rather than simply talks the talk. FWIW, we are transplants from the West Coast.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP - It would help to know why you are asking the question.
I am Asian American with Asian American children and am looking at independent schools in the NW DC area. I have observed that many schools here, while claiming to be committed to "diversity," seem to uphold a version of diversity that in practice is really a surprisingly antiquated version that focuses almost exclusively on black-white relations. I would like to find a school that fairly aggressively diversifies its student body (and faculty and staff) to include more Asian Americans, Hispanic Americans, and other kinds of ethicities. In other words, I would like to see a school that actually walks the walk of diversity, rather than simply talks the talk. FWIW, we are transplants from the West Coast.
Anonymous wrote:Maret: 48/635 or 7.6%
Sidwell: 86/1132 or 7.6%
GDS: 89/1075 or 8.3%
Latest numbers from the National Center for Education Statistics. I have not examined the quality of the data.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In 2010, Asians were 5.6% of the US population and 4.5% of the DC population. About 6.5% in DC & MD. Controlling for income, location, and interest in private school, 7%-8% is not so terrible.
OP is probably thinking that the percentage should be higher like in elite colleges.
No, I'm not. But it should be higher than 7-8%.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In 2010, Asians were 5.6% of the US population and 4.5% of the DC population. About 6.5% in DC & MD. Controlling for income, location, and interest in private school, 7%-8% is not so terrible.
OP is probably thinking that the percentage should be higher like in elite colleges.
Anonymous wrote:What would you consider critical mass?
Anonymous wrote:Elite colleges are a completely different animal.
Anonymous wrote:In 2010, Asians were 5.6% of the US population and 4.5% of the DC population. About 6.5% in DC & MD. Controlling for income, location, and interest in private school, 7%-8% is not so terrible.
Anonymous wrote:There was a long thread before on why Asians are underrepresented in independent schools. You may be able to find it if you do a search. The bottom line seems to be Asians are not interested rather than the schools are actively discriminate them. This is very different than the elite college situation.
Our little private school in MOCO wanted to market to Asian Americans. It is hard. Because they mostly go to Wootton.