Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would worry about bullying. Your child will be the only white kid. Will they be comfortable? Will YOU be comfortable with your kid dating black teens.
Wow I didn't this was still a concern in the DC in 2019!
Anonymous wrote:I would worry about bullying. Your child will be the only white kid. Will they be comfortable? Will YOU be comfortable with your kid dating black teens.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would worry about bullying. Your child will be the only white kid. Will they be comfortable? Will YOU be comfortable with your kid dating black teens.
Wow I didn't this was still a concern in the DC in 2019!
Anonymous wrote:I would worry about bullying. Your child will be the only white kid. Will they be comfortable? Will YOU be comfortable with your kid dating black teens.
Anonymous wrote:I would worry about bullying. Your child will be the only white kid. Will they be comfortable? Will YOU be comfortable with your kid dating black teens.
Anonymous wrote:I considered it for my biracial child. I asked my kid and she said she thought it would be weird to go to a school with only Black kids and no white kids.
On the academics, yes, the students and the school are doing great on the surface and when compared to other DC schools but looking closer I realized that the kids are advanced compared to Other DC public school kids who are often doing below avwrage. So no not really advanced just average or a bit above. Then there were a lot of hallmarks ofnlow performing schools such as Saturday school, lots of summer bridge and study programs and so on. So yes, the school has students doing better than the average DC public high school student but in no way was it equivalent to the academic level at a mid range suburban school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Banneker is definitely on my list for my geeky (white) DS who does not like sports and loves doing homework! Maybe it will be easier for him to find a girlfriend there too![]()
+1 It's the best high school in DC. Basic proficiency scores are much higher than for Wilson.
How do they report 100% graduation rate when so many boys drop out?
Anonymous wrote:I considered it for my biracial child. I asked my kid and she said she thought it would be weird to go to a school with only Black kids and no white kids.
On the academics, yes, the students and the school are doing great on the surface and when compared to other DC schools but looking closer I realized that the kids are advanced compared to Other DC public school kids who are often doing below avwrage. So no not really advanced just average or a bit above. Then there were a lot of hallmarks ofnlow performing schools such as Saturday school, lots of summer bridge and study programs and so on. So yes, the school has students doing better than the average DC public high school student but in no way was it equivalent to the academic level at a mid range suburban school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'd focus on whether the course offerings are a match for your child . Banneker offers both IB and AP. There are a lot of choices for a kid who likes history and social science. On the other hand, for math, they offer AP Calc AB, and the lowest math IB level allowed. There are few offerings for kids interested in languages.
Interesting. I always thought it was more of a STEM school... no?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Banneker is definitely on my list for my geeky (white) DS who does not like sports and loves doing homework! Maybe it will be easier for him to find a girlfriend there too![]()
+1 It's the best high school in DC. Basic proficiency scores are much higher than for Wilson.
How do they report 100% graduation rate when so many boys drop out?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: If it involves less focus on attraction to/from the opposite sex and less interest in that sort of "coolness"
Very interesting implied belief that your white child won't be attracted/attractive to black members of the opposite sex. I'm trying hard not to troll...In seriousness, I would (a) reconsider that belief, and then (b) consider how you would react if your child goes to Banneker and is attracted/attractive to black teenagers, and (c) consider how you would react if your child DOESN'T go to Banneker and is attracted to black teenagers.
I'm going to read differently into OP's post. Perhaps they meant that Banneker is a "nerdy" heads-down kind of school and therefore coolness and posturing may be less prominent? I really, really hope that's what they meant and not what you suggest.
Even in that case I think it's a stretch; this is high school.