Anonymous wrote:
Got it, thanks!
Bear with me here, but I thought that the point of pairing Chevy Chase schools with a school in Silver Spring, was in fact to desegregate those two schools and add more diversity to them?
I would have hought that in addition to the kids from NCC & CC, MCPS would also have included kids from other parts of Silver Spring that are farther away?
Correct me if I'm wrong... but isn't the area around RH/Woodside JUST as white as where we are (off of Jones Bridge Rd)?
If this program was created to desegregate in the first place, why isn't MCPS drawing/bussing kids from elementary's that are further into Silver Spring to attend RH and NCC/CC also?
I apologize if I'm failing to see the big picture here, but it seems to me that if you're going to go through all of the trouble of having your entire student body change schools midway through elementary school, shouldn't a far greater effort have been made to TRULY desegregate and increase the diversity?
Please tell me if I'm missing something here, because it almost looks like a bait and switch occurred?
Anonymous wrote:
Got it, thanks!
Bear with me here, but I thought that the point of pairing Chevy Chase schools with a school in Silver Spring, was in fact to desegregate those two schools and add more diversity to them?
I would have hought that in addition to the kids from NCC & CC, MCPS would also have included kids from other parts of Silver Spring that are farther away?
Correct me if I'm wrong... but isn't the area around RH/Woodside JUST as white as where we are (off of Jones Bridge Rd)?
If this program was created to desegregate in the first place, why isn't MCPS drawing/bussing kids from elementary's that are further into Silver Spring to attend RH and NCC/CC also?
I apologize if I'm failing to see the big picture here, but it seems to me that if you're going to go through all of the trouble of having your entire student body change schools midway through elementary school, shouldn't a far greater effort have been made to TRULY desegregate and increase the diversity?
Please tell me if I'm missing something here, because it almost looks like a bait and switch occurred?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:RH/NCC/CC are not the only paired schools in the county, though they may be the only ones where kids split in 3rd to two different schools. There are other K-2/3-5 paired schools like TPES is K-2, I forget the paired 3-5 maybe Pine Crest? There’s another pair in SS with New Hampshire Estates/Oak View. It was part of a conscious attempt to desegregate.
I went to RH/NCC from Kensington where I was very close to neither. I had no issues with it as a kid, but as an adult the negatives are clearer.
Correct. These are the other paired schools:
Takoma Park/Piney Branch
Montgomery Knolls/Pine Crest
New Hampshire Estates/Oak View
Bel Pre/Strathmore
Roscoe Nix/Cresthaven
I had no idea so many schools in MCPS were paired, thanks for the info.
So, I have another question...![]()
Coming from Brooklyn, it's obviously a gigantic melting pot where our classmates (starting from toddlers in pre-school) are of every single race, religion, creed, belief, nationality and sexual orientation that you can think of, so the concept of still having some schools being majorly segregated (or the fact that we even need paired schools to desegregate them) in the year 2020 is both mind boggling and absolutely heart breaking to me.
My question is this -- do paired schools actually accomplish what they were meant to, if the kids are only attending from K - 3rd?
It just seems to me that desegregating schools for K-3rd wouldn't really have the long term, in depth, positive affects that this program was created for, because they're so young when this is occurring.
Wouldn't it be better to have this program in middle school and high school also?
Or do the kids that live in Silver Spring that went to RH with my kids (but don't go to either NCC or CC after 3rd) all end up in the same high school together anyway?
Apologies if I just answered my own question, as my kids are all still in elementary and I obviously don't know as many of the details as I should about this program yet.
Any info or opinions are greatly appreciated!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:RH/NCC/CC are not the only paired schools in the county, though they may be the only ones where kids split in 3rd to two different schools. There are other K-2/3-5 paired schools like TPES is K-2, I forget the paired 3-5 maybe Pine Crest? There’s another pair in SS with New Hampshire Estates/Oak View. It was part of a conscious attempt to desegregate.
I went to RH/NCC from Kensington where I was very close to neither. I had no issues with it as a kid, but as an adult the negatives are clearer.
Correct. These are the other paired schools:
Takoma Park/Piney Branch
Montgomery Knolls/Pine Crest
New Hampshire Estates/Oak View
Bel Pre/Strathmore
Roscoe Nix/Cresthaven
I had no idea so many schools in MCPS were paired, thanks for the info.
So, I have another question...![]()
Coming from Brooklyn, it's obviously a gigantic melting pot where our classmates (starting from toddlers in pre-school) are of every single race, religion, creed, belief, nationality and sexual orientation that you can think of, so the concept of still having some schools being majorly segregated (or the fact that we even need paired schools to desegregate them) in the year 2020 is both mind boggling and absolutely heart breaking to me.
My question is this -- do paired schools actually accomplish what they were meant to, if the kids are only attending from K - 3rd?
It just seems to me that desegregating schools for K-3rd wouldn't really have the long term, in depth, positive affects that this program was created for, because they're so young when this is occurring.
Wouldn't it be better to have this program in middle school and high school also?
Or do the kids that live in Silver Spring that went to RH with my kids (but don't go to either NCC or CC after 3rd) all end up in the same high school together anyway?
Apologies if I just answered my own question, as my kids are all still in elementary and I obviously don't know as many of the details as I should about this program yet.
Any info or opinions are greatly appreciated!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:RH/NCC/CC are not the only paired schools in the county, though they may be the only ones where kids split in 3rd to two different schools. There are other K-2/3-5 paired schools like TPES is K-2, I forget the paired 3-5 maybe Pine Crest? There’s another pair in SS with New Hampshire Estates/Oak View. It was part of a conscious attempt to desegregate.
I went to RH/NCC from Kensington where I was very close to neither. I had no issues with it as a kid, but as an adult the negatives are clearer.
Correct. These are the other paired schools:
Takoma Park/Piney Branch
Montgomery Knolls/Pine Crest
New Hampshire Estates/Oak View
Bel Pre/Strathmore
Roscoe Nix/Cresthaven
Anonymous wrote:RH/NCC/CC are not the only paired schools in the county, though they may be the only ones where kids split in 3rd to two different schools. There are other K-2/3-5 paired schools like TPES is K-2, I forget the paired 3-5 maybe Pine Crest? There’s another pair in SS with New Hampshire Estates/Oak View. It was part of a conscious attempt to desegregate.
I went to RH/NCC from Kensington where I was very close to neither. I had no issues with it as a kid, but as an adult the negatives are clearer.
Anonymous wrote:There is a lot of history involved. The split has been there for many years, including when some of us were kids and did it.
Anonymous wrote:The part of Silver Spring, near Chevy Chase was very different.