Anonymous wrote:I'm familiar with the flyer referenced, though don't have kids at the school. To answer a PPs question, most kids at that swim club come from one of two local public schools, or local religious schools.
I have no direct knowledge of the event, but if I had to guess, this probably came to be when a couple of parents who are friends with teachers (and I think at least one teacher is a pool member) thought "hey, now that swim team is over and the pool is quiet, wouldn't it be fun to have a meet and greet to gear up for the new school year for all the kids here at the pool" - and then put together the flyers.
I have no problem with that, and actually like the fact that it seeks to be inclusive of all kids from the school - beyond groups of friends/swim team kids who might regularly socialize. However, the way it is advertised with the teachers being present does make it seem like more of a school sponsored event, and thus I can see where your concerns about exclusivity for non-pool members arise. It probably would have been more appropriate just to say something like "Mrs. Jones and Mr. Walter may stop by to say hi too!"
Presumably, if a group of parents at one of the lower SES apartment complexes wanted to have a back to school Popsicle party nobody would complain - the issue just becomes who has access to school staff.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This seems like it is a Teacher Appreciation event, not a "Meet and Greet."
Which...I think it is really nice of parents to leverage their privilege (and a pool membership is a privilege) in order to support teachers and staff.
Nice try.
If your work colleague belonged to a country club, as did some other colleagues, but you didn’t, and they invited your newly-hired company head to an event at the club to “meet the new boss,” how would you feel? Left out?
Anonymous wrote:It is also unequal access. Only those who can pay can play.
Anonymous wrote:This seems like it is a Teacher Appreciation event, not a "Meet and Greet."
Which...I think it is really nice of parents to leverage their privilege (and a pool membership is a privilege) in order to support teachers and staff.
Anonymous wrote:Is it wrong to not want people can't afford your club and might not respect it's rules to not attend an event. Don't people join swim clubs to avoid the chaos, lack of class and community of public pools?
Social Justice nuts can't have it both ways. You can't demand that all areas integrate by SES by stuffing poor people in nice areas they can't afford and then expect the well off to dumb down their exclusivity so everybody can participate in everything. If you make well off people live like poor people they will stop living in places like Aspen Hill or Silver Spring and only cluster around other like well off people. I find the hypocrisy of the OP galling.
Anonymous wrote:My kid attends an MCPS ES that is considered a Focus school. It's a racially and socioeconomically diverse school.
The local, private Swim Club is holding an event this month. Popsicles with teachers/staff. But, you HAVE to be a member or a guest of a member (and pay) to attend.
Swim club memberships cost about $500/family. Event is not being advertised on our ES website. Not advertised on the PTA website. Only posted for members of the Swim Club to see.
What do parents/teachers on here think? Makes me a little uncomfortable, but maybe I'm overly sensitive because of my own background.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kid attends an MCPS ES that is considered a Focus school. It's a racially and socioeconomically diverse school.
The local, private Swim Club is holding an event this month. Popsicles with teachers/staff. But, you HAVE to be a member or a guest of a member (and pay) to attend.
Swim club memberships cost about $500/family. Event is not being advertised on our ES website. Not advertised on the PTA website. Only posted for members of the Swim Club to see.
What do parents/teachers on here think? Makes me a little uncomfortable, but maybe I'm overly sensitive because of my own background.
This is confusing to me. I belong to a "local, private Swim Club" (that happens to cost about $500/year!). The families that belong to our club must attend twenty or more different public and private elementary, middle and high schools. I doubt that any one school would have more than twenty kids or so that are members. We host "back to school" and "end of school year" events every year, but they are never exclusively for students of a specific school. And teachers and staff from any particular school aren't there unless they happen to be members.
Are you sure something didn't get lost in translation here? Is this an event only for students of a particular school, and are the teachers and staff from that school really going to be there? Are you sure this isn't just your typical "hear ye, hear ye, come one, come all, students, teachers and staff, to our annual back to school popsicle party?"
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Teacher here from a Title One school. What's wrong with a Back to School popsicle pool party at a swim club for the members/guests of the swim club? If it is in place of an open event held previously for everyone, that is not cool. Does the school host their own BTS event? If not, why not?
OP here
Yes, our school has a Back to School thing in the fall that everyone can attend. But, it seems like it's meant for students/parents. Have never seen teachers there.
Teacher here. I never stay for the BTS picnic at my school because it is during daycare pickup for my son.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Who is bringing in the teachers? Are they guests of members?
Is this in Silver Spring?
Rockville/Aspen Hill area. Close to Silver Spring
Not exactly sure who's bringing the teachers!
Is it the swim club near Earle B. Wood MS?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Teacher here from a Title One school. What's wrong with a Back to School popsicle pool party at a swim club for the members/guests of the swim club? If it is in place of an open event held previously for everyone, that is not cool. Does the school host their own BTS event? If not, why not?
OP here
Yes, our school has a Back to School thing in the fall that everyone can attend. But, it seems like it's meant for students/parents. Have never seen teachers there.
Anonymous wrote:Is it wrong to not want people can't afford your club and might not respect it's rules to not attend an event. Don't people join swim clubs to avoid the chaos, lack of class and community of public pools?
Social Justice nuts can't have it both ways. You can't demand that all areas integrate by SES by stuffing poor people in nice areas they can't afford and then expect the well off to dumb down their exclusivity so everybody can participate in everything. If you make well off people live like poor people they will stop living in places like Aspen Hill or Silver Spring and only cluster around other like well off people. I find the hypocrisy of the OP galling.
Anonymous wrote:My kid attends an MCPS ES that is considered a Focus school. It's a racially and socioeconomically diverse school.
The local, private Swim Club is holding an event this month. Popsicles with teachers/staff. But, you HAVE to be a member or a guest of a member (and pay) to attend.
Swim club memberships cost about $500/family. Event is not being advertised on our ES website. Not advertised on the PTA website. Only posted for members of the Swim Club to see.
What do parents/teachers on here think? Makes me a little uncomfortable, but maybe I'm overly sensitive because of my own background.