Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Omg! The hand wringing on this thread is over the top. I am so thankful I didn’t have parents like you. You probably spent hours doing flash cards and worksheets with your toddlers. Now constantly ride your MS and HS kids to the brink of suicide obsessed with getting some imaginary leg up on your hypothetical competition. At the end of the day, if you’re making the typical DCUM income, your kid will do just fine in life because as study after study states, it’s better to be rich than smart. In the end, whether or not your Lake Wobegone gifted child is being challenged enough in DCPS, s/he will likely go to college, graduate, and do fine.
Now if your complaints were actually concerns for our DCPS community as a whole, I have respect for you.
Let me correct you. The kids will go to college unprepared to compete at a higher level against kids who are used to being challenged and pushed more with a higher performing peer group in a school district that has more rigor and higher expectations. That is what you don’t get.
Just being accepted to college does not cut it. Why don’t you goggle all the articles on kids who did well in poor performing urban schools who then struggled in college. Lots of those articles for you to peruse. Why don’t you ask the kid who graduated from McKinley tech with A’s in math who was placed in remedial math in college. True story. I don’t need to say more.
Again, rich kids can’t fail at life. Statistically impossible.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I've seen some ignorant and lazy threads on DCUM, but this one takes the cake. What a ridiculous collection of misunderstood, made-up and taken out of context nonsense.
There's plenty to complain about in DCPS, but this generalized bitching based on no information is absurd.
Really? The negatives add up. A couple of years ago, I felt positive about staying with DCPS all the way through Wilson. But I’ve since grown to fear where things are heading. It is easy to see how standards are being watered down; it is hard to see what will improve for high-achieving students.
After progress under several mayors, Williams, Fenty and even Gray, DCPS and other aspects of DC services have definitely slipped back under Bowser. Bowser appoints the schools chancellor. We’ve gone backwards with Bowser. It’s past time for a change.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:And yet none of you are planning to run for council or mayor right? Bowser is untouchable and upper NW and rich cap hill folks lee voting for council members who are soft on crime and softer on school standards.
Upper NW now despises Bowser.
Anonymous wrote:And yet none of you are planning to run for council or mayor right? Bowser is untouchable and upper NW and rich cap hill folks lee voting for council members who are soft on crime and softer on school standards.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I've seen some ignorant and lazy threads on DCUM, but this one takes the cake. What a ridiculous collection of misunderstood, made-up and taken out of context nonsense.
There's plenty to complain about in DCPS, but this generalized bitching based on no information is absurd.
Really? The negatives add up. A couple of years ago, I felt positive about staying with DCPS all the way through Wilson. But I’ve since grown to fear where things are heading. It is easy to see how standards are being watered down; it is hard to see what will improve for high-achieving students.
Anonymous wrote:Going to be interesting to see how basically banning school suspensions for unruly kids is going to work out.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Omg! The hand wringing on this thread is over the top. I am so thankful I didn’t have parents like you. You probably spent hours doing flash cards and worksheets with your toddlers. Now constantly ride your MS and HS kids to the brink of suicide obsessed with getting some imaginary leg up on your hypothetical competition. At the end of the day, if you’re making the typical DCUM income, your kid will do just fine in life because as study after study states, it’s better to be rich than smart. In the end, whether or not your Lake Wobegone gifted child is being challenged enough in DCPS, s/he will likely go to college, graduate, and do fine.
Now if your complaints were actually concerns for our DCPS community as a whole, I have respect for you.
Let me correct you. The kids will go to college unprepared to compete at a higher level against kids who are used to being challenged and pushed more with a higher performing peer group in a school district that has more rigor and higher expectations. That is what you don’t get.
Just being accepted to college does not cut it. Why don’t you goggle all the articles on kids who did well in poor performing urban schools who then struggled in college. Lots of those articles for you to peruse. Why don’t you ask the kid who graduated from McKinley tech with A’s in math who was placed in remedial math in college. True story. I don’t need to say more.
Again, rich kids can’t fail at life. Statistically impossible.
We all know middle class and upper middle class peers who did not do fine. And some of us are the first generation to claw our way into the middle class, which means all our siblings are working retail or worse. What separates our kids from their cousins? Not much. I agree that the average child from an average middle class or upper middle class family is likly to do fine. But what about the ADHD kid? I'm not defending this thread, which is dumb and hperbolic. But I am dismissing the statement that our kids will do fine because of our SES. Lots of variables still at play.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Omg! The hand wringing on this thread is over the top. I am so thankful I didn’t have parents like you. You probably spent hours doing flash cards and worksheets with your toddlers. Now constantly ride your MS and HS kids to the brink of suicide obsessed with getting some imaginary leg up on your hypothetical competition. At the end of the day, if you’re making the typical DCUM income, your kid will do just fine in life because as study after study states, it’s better to be rich than smart. In the end, whether or not your Lake Wobegone gifted child is being challenged enough in DCPS, s/he will likely go to college, graduate, and do fine.
Now if your complaints were actually concerns for our DCPS community as a whole, I have respect for you.
Let me correct you. The kids will go to college unprepared to compete at a higher level against kids who are used to being challenged and pushed more with a higher performing peer group in a school district that has more rigor and higher expectations. That is what you don’t get.
Just being accepted to college does not cut it. Why don’t you goggle all the articles on kids who did well in poor performing urban schools who then struggled in college. Lots of those articles for you to peruse. Why don’t you ask the kid who graduated from McKinley tech with A’s in math who was placed in remedial math in college. True story. I don’t need to say more.
Again, rich kids can’t fail at life. Statistically impossible.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Omg! The hand wringing on this thread is over the top. I am so thankful I didn’t have parents like you. You probably spent hours doing flash cards and worksheets with your toddlers. Now constantly ride your MS and HS kids to the brink of suicide obsessed with getting some imaginary leg up on your hypothetical competition. At the end of the day, if you’re making the typical DCUM income, your kid will do just fine in life because as study after study states, it’s better to be rich than smart. In the end, whether or not your Lake Wobegone gifted child is being challenged enough in DCPS, s/he will likely go to college, graduate, and do fine.
Now if your complaints were actually concerns for our DCPS community as a whole, I have respect for you.
Let me correct you. The kids will go to college unprepared to compete at a higher level against kids who are used to being challenged and pushed more with a higher performing peer group in a school district that has more rigor and higher expectations. That is what you don’t get.
Just being accepted to college does not cut it. Why don’t you goggle all the articles on kids who did well in poor performing urban schools who then struggled in college. Lots of those articles for you to peruse. Why don’t you ask the kid who graduated from McKinley tech with A’s in math who was placed in remedial math in college. True story. I don’t need to say more.
Anonymous wrote:Omg! The hand wringing on this thread is over the top. I am so thankful I didn’t have parents like you. You probably spent hours doing flash cards and worksheets with your toddlers. Now constantly ride your MS and HS kids to the brink of suicide obsessed with getting some imaginary leg up on your hypothetical competition. At the end of the day, if you’re making the typical DCUM income, your kid will do just fine in life because as study after study states, it’s better to be rich than smart. In the end, whether or not your Lake Wobegone gifted child is being challenged enough in DCPS, s/he will likely go to college, graduate, and do fine.
Now if your complaints were actually concerns for our DCPS community as a whole, I have respect for you.