Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Parent of white kids in the Deal/Wilson feeder pattern here: I don't have a problem with this language. It's a little clumsy, obviously, but I'm fine with the goal of diverse schools.
OP here:
If you want to promote equity, you discuss the positives - seats for OOB, at risk preferences, benefits for those populations, etc.
You don’t talk about an entire ethnicity as if it’s a “problem” to be solved. This isn’t clumsy; it’s hostile.
So now, what, we're going to be all up in arms about whatever proposal they make because of some dumb language in a PowerPoint? I don't think it's hostile, anyway.
Substitute black for white here and you’d be all over this. Hypocrite.
Gee, can you think of any reasons why, in a majority-white country that allowed black people to be owned and sold as property for hundreds of years and still has massive race-driven structural inequities in place, it would seem worse to talk about growth of a minority black population in schools as a problem than it is to talk about the opposite of that? If not, perhaps you should talk to whoever ran the history classes in whatever school district you attended for high school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Parent of white kids in the Deal/Wilson feeder pattern here: I don't have a problem with this language. It's a little clumsy, obviously, but I'm fine with the goal of diverse schools.
OP here:
If you want to promote equity, you discuss the positives - seats for OOB, at risk preferences, benefits for those populations, etc.
You don’t talk about an entire ethnicity as if it’s a “problem” to be solved. This isn’t clumsy; it’s hostile.
So now, what, we're going to be all up in arms about whatever proposal they make because of some dumb language in a PowerPoint? I don't think it's hostile, anyway.
Substitute black for white here and you’d be all over this. Hypocrite.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:White people don’t like it when people say ‘too white’.
But they have no problem saying ‘too Black’ or ‘too Asian’.
Yes isn't that the case!!!!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Parent of white kids in the Deal/Wilson feeder pattern here: I don't have a problem with this language. It's a little clumsy, obviously, but I'm fine with the goal of diverse schools.
OP here:
If you want to promote equity, you discuss the positives - seats for OOB, at risk preferences, benefits for those populations, etc.
You don’t talk about an entire ethnicity as if it’s a “problem” to be solved. This isn’t clumsy; it’s hostile.
So now, what, we're going to be all up in arms about whatever proposal they make because of some dumb language in a PowerPoint? I don't think it's hostile, anyway.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I like the language and appreciate the working group telling it like it is. WOTP schools are too white, period.
Too white? Why? Because EOTR is not white at all?
NW is less white than national averages, and it’s less white than many neighborhoods a mile or two away (ie, in other states but closer than EOTR).
So the problem is the DCPS student population from NW is “too white” compared to the student population EOTR.
So the issues include arbitrary borders, historical housing discrimination, self-selected housing preferences, capitalism-based income disparities, discrimination-based income disparities, etc etc.
But sure. Why should DCPS focus energetically on using providing the best educational experience to each of its 40,000 students, when, instead, it can focus on “mitigating whiteness”?
Because segregation is bad. We have, as a country, shown we are not capable of providing equal educational opportunities for schools with white kids versus schools with black kids. It’s easy in the abstract to oppose segregation, but the reaction here shows how hard it is to deal with in the real world.
But my point is that DCPS can’t solve problems for the country, and, more importantly, that it sees the issue from an idiosyncratic angle.
Saying “The schools in NW are too white” is a bizarre thing to say and only makes sense when considering that DC has spent a bunch of recent decades as a majority Black city.”
Or just let me second what a PP said above: White students are not a “problem” in need of managing. The zeal to correct large historical wrongs has thrown perspective off.
White students aren’t a problem, but increasing concentration of white students (“whitening”) is a problem. It’s good that the city is trying to figure out what to do about it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Maybe the issue is the word whitening. I’ve never heard that and it does sound hostile or just offensive even if trie. You’d never be caught dead saying blackening that’s for sure.
Right — concentration of white students would have been less awkward
But the problem isn’t the white students (who are IB and just following the rules and attending thei IB schools.) The problem is that black kids’ IB schools are failing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Maybe the issue is the word whitening. I’ve never heard that and it does sound hostile or just offensive even if trie. You’d never be caught dead saying blackening that’s for sure.
Right — concentration of white students would have been less awkward
But the problem isn’t the white students (who are IB and just following the rules and attending thei IB schools.) The problem is that black kids’ IB schools are failing.
Anonymous wrote:I agree with that statement OP. We have a problem with resource hogging in this city.
Anonymous wrote:White people don’t like it when people say ‘too white’.
But they have no problem saying ‘too Black’ or ‘too Asian’.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I like the language and appreciate the working group telling it like it is. WOTP schools are too white, period.
Too white? Why? Because EOTR is not white at all?
NW is less white than national averages, and it’s less white than many neighborhoods a mile or two away (ie, in other states but closer than EOTR).
So the problem is the DCPS student population from NW is “too white” compared to the student population EOTR.
So the issues include arbitrary borders, historical housing discrimination, self-selected housing preferences, capitalism-based income disparities, discrimination-based income disparities, etc etc.
But sure. Why should DCPS focus energetically on using providing the best educational experience to each of its 40,000 students, when, instead, it can focus on “mitigating whiteness”?
Because segregation is bad. We have, as a country, shown we are not capable of providing equal educational opportunities for schools with white kids versus schools with black kids. It’s easy in the abstract to oppose segregation, but the reaction here shows how hard it is to deal with in the real world.
But my point is that DCPS can’t solve problems for the country, and, more importantly, that it sees the issue from an idiosyncratic angle.
Saying “The schools in NW are too white” is a bizarre thing to say and only makes sense when considering that DC has spent a bunch of recent decades as a majority Black city.”
Or just let me second what a PP said above: White students are not a “problem” in need of managing. The zeal to correct large historical wrongs has thrown perspective off.
Wilson is white because UNW is white.
The only real solution here is to really bus in kids from all over the city: a magnet.
Then build another high school. Then more problems will arise. Or, make the magnet Eastern....