Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm not going to tell anyone that Whitman has great diversity (unless you value international diversity), but it does have a lot of very high achieving AA students, and they tend to do very well in the college admissions process. Just something to keep in mind if that's a priority.
Not sure if you can make many generalizations given the tiny sample size (< 4% of the school is AA).
Also, I listened to a WAMU event earlier this year in which some AA students emotionally described their negative experiences at Whitman. For example:
"Breanna McDonald, a senior at Walt Whitman High School and a leader in the countywide student-run Minority Scholars Program, puts her support for the boundary study in the context of her own experiences, as one of the few students of color in most of her classes at Whitman. She’s seen the school community fractured by a number of hateful incidents — a student calling another student the n-word, a Black History Month assembly mocked online, a racist Snapchat post, a teacher who she says made her feel “less than”– and she hopes that increased diversity at the school could improve the climate and make her feel less isolated.
McDonald didn’t sugarcoat her experiences in comments at the town hall.
“If I had known what I know now, I would’ve transferred from Whitman,” she told the room. “There’s no amount of equity and wealth that that school can provide me,” to make up for the “trauma” that she experienced there.
https://wamu.org/story/19/04/02/how-students-in-montgomery-county-are-leading-the-push-for-school-redistricting/
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm not going to tell anyone that Whitman has great diversity (unless you value international diversity), but it does have a lot of very high achieving AA students, and they tend to do very well in the college admissions process. Just something to keep in mind if that's a priority.
Less than 5% of Whitman students are black. That’s not “a lot”.
Anonymous wrote:I'm not going to tell anyone that Whitman has great diversity (unless you value international diversity), but it does have a lot of very high achieving AA students, and they tend to do very well in the college admissions process. Just something to keep in mind if that's a priority.
Anonymous wrote:I'm not going to tell anyone that Whitman has great diversity (unless you value international diversity), but it does have a lot of very high achieving AA students, and they tend to do very well in the college admissions process. Just something to keep in mind if that's a priority.
Anonymous wrote:I'm not going to tell anyone that Whitman has great diversity (unless you value international diversity), but it does have a lot of very high achieving AA students, and they tend to do very well in the college admissions process. Just something to keep in mind if that's a priority.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I am Asian and my kids go to a very diverse school. The expectation from AA students and the education they get...is frankly, below standard, and parents are pretty complicit in tjis. I cannot understand how they will succeed in life because there is very little going on in their lives that will help them in succeeding.
So, maybe you don’t want her kids to be friends with the kids of this person.
OP is an AA who is posting on this board due to her deep interest in the education of her children, so this is an inappropriate response.
Exactly.
+2. PP's post wasn't relevant to the OP at all. It seems she just wanted to bash the black families at her kid's school, smh.
+3 I have some specific warnings to AA families at our local school, but they are very specifically about being a Black American in a school where most of the Black kids identify strongly as African. Across the board, though, the Black families are involved and care deeply about their children's educations.
This is also why Whitman is a horrible choice. This line of thinking is prevalent, who cares if a principal holds a conference about black face. How about being around people that never needed that conference.
Hmm. I'd rather be in a community where people are outraged about racial incidents like these (and people absolutely were at Whitman) than one where they are blase. There is racism almost everywhere, unfortunately.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I am Asian and my kids go to a very diverse school. The expectation from AA students and the education they get...is frankly, below standard, and parents are pretty complicit in tjis. I cannot understand how they will succeed in life because there is very little going on in their lives that will help them in succeeding.
So, maybe you don’t want her kids to be friends with the kids of this person.
OP is an AA who is posting on this board due to her deep interest in the education of her children, so this is an inappropriate response.
Exactly.
+2. PP's post wasn't relevant to the OP at all. It seems she just wanted to bash the black families at her kid's school, smh.
+3 I have some specific warnings to AA families at our local school, but they are very specifically about being a Black American in a school where most of the Black kids identify strongly as African. Across the board, though, the Black families are involved and care deeply about their children's educations.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I am Asian and my kids go to a very diverse school. The expectation from AA students and the education they get...is frankly, below standard, and parents are pretty complicit in tjis. I cannot understand how they will succeed in life because there is very little going on in their lives that will help them in succeeding.
So, maybe you don’t want her kids to be friends with the kids of this person.
OP is an AA who is posting on this board due to her deep interest in the education of her children, so this is an inappropriate response.
Exactly.
+2. PP's post wasn't relevant to the OP at all. It seems she just wanted to bash the black families at her kid's school, smh.
+3 I have some specific warnings to AA families at our local school, but they are very specifically about being a Black American in a school where most of the Black kids identify strongly as African. Across the board, though, the Black families are involved and care deeply about their children's educations.
This is also why Whitman is a horrible choice. This line of thinking is prevalent, who cares if a principal holds a conference about black face. How about being around people that never needed that conference.

Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Whitman pyramid. And private tutoring.
Wasn't Whitman was the school with the N*word cards or was it the one with the blackface incident?