Anonymous wrote:I decided against DC Bilingual because of the commute - it's always about the commute, but Sela - bilingual - near my house - happy camper![]()
Anonymous wrote:There's definitely at least one, maybe two serious anti-charter operative on this board, someone with an agenda and a shoulder bearing a chip, who comes on every couple of days with a cluster of astro-turfing posts, usually late at night or in other distinct patterns, with a group of posts coming in from some angle purporting to have inside knowledge or purporting to have some opinionated idea of what might happen at charter X, all followed by a slew of sock-puppeting posts all agreeing with the first, all composed and posted within minutes of each other. And if anyone points out facts to the contrary, they are yelled at for daring to tamp down agenda-driven opinions with actual facts, accused of boosterism and so on, even to the point of obscenities so foul they get deleted. Just be aware of that, pay it no mind.
This sounds kind of paranoid. And wrong. I think there are many parents expressing their legitimate concerns about schools, including charter schools, and they are adding important points to the conversation. It's YOU who are trying to turn the conversation into some US vs THEM anti-charter inflammatory fight when, honestly, it isn't.
It's completely legitimate and important to question whether Hebrew immersion is a good idea. It's a very difficult language and used by a relatively small number of people.
There's definitely at least one, maybe two serious anti-charter operative on this board, someone with an agenda and a shoulder bearing a chip, who comes on every couple of days with a cluster of astro-turfing posts, usually late at night or in other distinct patterns, with a group of posts coming in from some angle purporting to have inside knowledge or purporting to have some opinionated idea of what might happen at charter X, all followed by a slew of sock-puppeting posts all agreeing with the first, all composed and posted within minutes of each other. And if anyone points out facts to the contrary, they are yelled at for daring to tamp down agenda-driven opinions with actual facts, accused of boosterism and so on, even to the point of obscenities so foul they get deleted. Just be aware of that, pay it no mind.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How did Sela get this space? IT families would have liked it.
Not all IT families. There are quite a few of us who live in Logan Circle/U Street and want to remain centrally located.
Well, I have to say living in U Street - I'm actually happy about Sela's location. It's just a few metro stops away, and we did not have a great reaction when we visited some of the schools in our neighborhood, e.g., Meridian, IT. So, from a location perspective - I think they did a good job in finding such a large space.
But how can you compare existing charters with a new charter that hasn't yet started? How do you know whether Sela will get great teachers, or just any old teacher they can get who speaks Hebrew? After all, the pool of native Hebrew-speaking teachers can't be that big, can it? I want to be able to meet the teachers before my DD starts school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How did Sela get this space? IT families would have liked it.
Not all IT families. There are quite a few of us who live in Logan Circle/U Street and want to remain centrally located.
Well, I have to say living in U Street - I'm actually happy about Sela's location. It's just a few metro stops away, and we did not have a great reaction when we visited some of the schools in our neighborhood, e.g., Meridian, IT. So, from a location perspective - I think they did a good job in finding such a large space.
But how can you compare existing charters with a new charter that hasn't yet started? How do you know whether Sela will get great teachers, or just any old teacher they can get who speaks Hebrew? After all, the pool of native Hebrew-speaking teachers can't be that big, can it? I want to be able to meet the teachers before my DD starts school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How did Sela get this space? IT families would have liked it.
Not all IT families. There are quite a few of us who live in Logan Circle/U Street and want to remain centrally located.
Well, I have to say living in U Street - I'm actually happy about Sela's location. It's just a few metro stops away, and we did not have a great reaction when we visited some of the schools in our neighborhood, e.g., Meridian, IT. So, from a location perspective - I think they did a good job in finding such a large space.
Anonymous wrote:It's pretty depressing that most of the posts celebrating the location are only concerned with the commute.
It's a definite minority, and I'm being generous here, who are celebrating the Hebrew language immersion quality of the school.
So, let's be honest. No one is interested is in Hebrew language immersion. You're just hoping the lottery rescues you from your home school, and, that your commute is short.
Kind of ugly when spelled out that way, isn't it?
Totally ignorant, and also, not accurate. It's a new school - might not have a lottery, if they fill up first come, first serve. Most parents in D.C. are just looking for a quality charter school near their house, because they don't have a quality DCPS school near their house. The foreign language is just the cherry on the sundae! Go Hebrew, go Swahili, go Uzbek, I don't care. Just give me a quality school. Teaching my kid a language is a bonus.
PP #2, you and 17:26 make PP#1s point for her. You and 17:26 basically say, yeah! I don't really give a crap about the mission of this school, all I know is that I might get a seat and it's close! And by the way, you're ignorant for suggesting that I don't really give a crap about the mission of this school! Ignorant!
Exactly. You all make her point. You care about your commute and you think it's going to be a quality charter school, based on...nothing to do with believing that Hebrew immersion is important to a quality education. In order to call the PP ignorant, you'd have to show that Hebrew immersion is necessary and important to a quality education. Not one of you has done that. You rely on on your commute and on the assumption, based on nothing, that this is a quality school simply because it is a charter school.
I agree, that is the truly sad and pathetic thing.