Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Lmao about previous posters saying some parents are racist because there are not brown and black kids at Catholic, where they live. I live in an affluent suburb and the Catholic schools are more diverse in half the county than the public elementary schools. Some of you are dense and have zero perspective other than the mean streets of your exurb.
It’s not just racial diversity the schools lack. It’s socioeconomic and academic diversity. You don’t want your kids at school with poor kids or kids with learning disabilities. Which is fine if you admit it, what’s hypocritical is pretending otherwise.
Does this also apply to the college admissions game years down the line? Is your local community college your first choice due to socioeconomic and academic diversity?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Lmao about previous posters saying some parents are racist because there are not brown and black kids at Catholic, where they live. I live in an affluent suburb and the Catholic schools are more diverse in half the county than the public elementary schools. Some of you are dense and have zero perspective other than the mean streets of your exurb.
It’s not just racial diversity the schools lack. It’s socioeconomic and academic diversity. You don’t want your kids at school with poor kids or kids with learning disabilities. Which is fine if you admit it, what’s hypocritical is pretending otherwise.
Anonymous wrote:Lmao about previous posters saying some parents are racist because there are not brown and black kids at Catholic, where they live. I live in an affluent suburb and the Catholic schools are more diverse in half the county than the public elementary schools. Some of you are dense and have zero perspective other than the mean streets of your exurb.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My eight year old DD’s friend is going to catholic school next year from their public. She is telling DD that she is going there to get a better education because our elementary is bad and that if we had more money we would do the same. I know the parents very well. Would you say something to the parents? I would want to know if my kid was saying that but I imagine the kid got it from somewhere…
She’s not wrong.
That's your opinion. I and most of the people I know would never send their kids to Catholic school even if it were free because the math and science education is so poor.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My eight year old DD’s friend is going to catholic school next year from their public. She is telling DD that she is going there to get a better education because our elementary is bad and that if we had more money we would do the same. I know the parents very well. Would you say something to the parents? I would want to know if my kid was saying that but I imagine the kid got it from somewhere…
+1. Not only that but I also things it a negative to raise kids whose only peers are UMC whites and Asians.
She’s not wrong.
That's your opinion. I and most of the people I know would never send their kids to Catholic school even if it were free because the math and science education is so poor.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My eight year old DD’s friend is going to catholic school next year from their public. She is telling DD that she is going there to get a better education because our elementary is bad and that if we had more money we would do the same. I know the parents very well. Would you say something to the parents? I would want to know if my kid was saying that but I imagine the kid got it from somewhere…
She’s not wrong.
Anonymous wrote:My eight year old DD’s friend is going to catholic school next year from their public. She is telling DD that she is going there to get a better education because our elementary is bad and that if we had more money we would do the same. I know the parents very well. Would you say something to the parents? I would want to know if my kid was saying that but I imagine the kid got it from somewhere…