Anonymous wrote:. No, the post is grounded and pratical, stating an inconvenient truth. If language exposure is what you’re after for your mono-lingual American family, Spanish, obviously. Chinese demands unusual committment to pay off. No point in pretending otherwise.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you can't, or won't, support Mandarin outside school, why bother? Chinese is much more difficult to learn than the other AP languages, even for the children of native speakers. It's not uncommon for Walls and J-R AP Chinese students to score low, 2s, 3s.
Because some families don’t need fluency and want to expose their kid to another language.
Your post reeks of privilege and entitlement and condescending. Get off your high horse FFS
. No, the post is grounded and pratical, stating an inconvenient truth. If language exposure is what you’re after for your mono-lingual American family, Spanish, obviously. Chinese demands unusual committment to pay off. No point in pretending otherwise.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you can't, or won't, support Mandarin outside school, why bother? Chinese is much more difficult to learn than the other AP languages, even for the children of native speakers. It's not uncommon for Walls and J-R AP Chinese students to score low, 2s, 3s.
Because some families don’t need fluency and want to expose their kid to another language.
Your post reeks of privilege and entitlement and condescending. Get off your high horse FFS
Anonymous wrote:If you prioritize languages then go to the immersion charters and then DCI.
There is a cohort of Deal IN families who do this and are at DCI.
Spanish is the strongest in feeders and DCI. Chinese is not as strong but your kid will learn alot more than taking it in a non-immersion high school
Anonymous wrote:If you can't, or won't, support Mandarin outside school, why bother? Chinese is much more difficult to learn than the other AP languages, even for the children of native speakers. It's not uncommon for Walls and J-R AP Chinese students to score low, 2s, 3s.
Anonymous wrote:I work in college admissions and I'm not seeing breaks for high SES kids on the receiving end of DCPS' poor decisions. UMC teens either impress admissions officers or don't. If your student is on track to take AP Mandarin in DCPS, complete the prep somehow, have them take the exam and score high. That's the only way to salvage an opportunity lost. Don't kid yourself that "information from the school counselor about course offerings" will help.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:https://www.dcurbanmom.com/jforum/posts/list/1206590.page
Competitive colleges want to see four years of foreign language. UVA treats it like a core class, not an extra. Walls is really screwing over those rising juniors and seniors who have been taking Chinese. They should have cut a counselor instead.
No one, not even UVA, is going to hold it against kids that the program at their high school was cut. Just as they don’t hold it against Walls kids now when AP can’t be offered because there’s not enough demand.
Like colleges know the language was cut. It's not like their data screeners have fields for personnel changes.
They get information for the school counselor about course offerings.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:https://www.dcurbanmom.com/jforum/posts/list/1206590.page
Competitive colleges want to see four years of foreign language. UVA treats it like a core class, not an extra. Walls is really screwing over those rising juniors and seniors who have been taking Chinese. They should have cut a counselor instead.
No one, not even UVA, is going to hold it against kids that the program at their high school was cut. Just as they don’t hold it against Walls kids now when AP can’t be offered because there’s not enough demand.
Like colleges know the language was cut. It's not like their data screeners have fields for personnel changes.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not buying the above in an age when it's not unusual for teens to prep themselves for APs, to prep via summer study and to prep via private tutoring. UVA etc. aren't necessarily going to admit an UMC, non-URM, unhooked straight-A student under the best of circumstances. When a language gets cut, the most ambitious UMC families will find a way forward. There are good heritage language weekend programs in MoCo that will prep your kid for AP Mandarin nicely. There's also the 4-week long Concordia camp for HS credit in MN (just $6,000!) and immersion camps abroad.
Not many of us can manage that kind of expense or time.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:https://www.dcurbanmom.com/jforum/posts/list/1206590.page
Competitive colleges want to see four years of foreign language. UVA treats it like a core class, not an extra. Walls is really screwing over those rising juniors and seniors who have been taking Chinese. They should have cut a counselor instead.
No one, not even UVA, is going to hold it against kids that the program at their high school was cut. Just as they don’t hold it against Walls kids now when AP can’t be offered because there’s not enough demand.
Like colleges know the language was cut. It's not like their data screeners have fields for personnel changes.
Anonymous wrote:Not buying the above in an age when it's not unusual for teens to prep themselves for APs, to prep via summer study and to prep via private tutoring. UVA etc. aren't necessarily going to admit an UMC, non-URM, unhooked straight-A student under the best of circumstances. When a language gets cut, the most ambitious UMC families will find a way forward. There are good heritage language weekend programs in MoCo that will prep your kid for AP Mandarin nicely. There's also the 4-week long Concordia camp for HS credit in MN (just $6,000!) and immersion camps abroad.