Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You'll find the most diversity (in the superficial racial sense) at Murch, the wannabee M that its boosters keep trying to attach to JKLM.
Just curious, why shouldn't "Murch" be attached to JKLM?
I know very prominent parents who have taken their kids out of Murch and Lafayette because they did not feel like the school was very welcoming to kids of color.
this is total BS, at least for Murch (the school where my kids go). in my 6 years at Murch the only AA I know was pulled from the school left to go to Sidwell (she was on the waitlist) - mother told me that H's employer was paying for the tuition. my kids have AA classmates, Asians, and kids from International families. both my kids have one AA teacher this year (one kid has an AA teacher and an Indian teacher). so take your BS with you a find something nicer to do than trolling here. thanks
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You'll find the most diversity (in the superficial racial sense) at Murch, the wannabee M that its boosters keep trying to attach to JKLM.
Just curious, why shouldn't "Murch" be attached to JKLM?
I know very prominent parents who have taken their kids out of Murch and Lafayette because they did not feel like the school was very welcoming to kids of color.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You'll find the most diversity (in the superficial racial sense) at Murch, the wannabee M that its boosters keep trying to attach to JKLM.
Just curious, why shouldn't "Murch" be attached to JKLM?
I know very prominent parents who have taken their kids out of Murch and Lafayette because they did not feel like the school was very welcoming to kids of color.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Janney second grade parent here. This post prompted me to get out the directory during this 2 hour delay.
In Janney second grade:
121 students
4 --black students with black parents
3 --black students with 1 white, 1 black parent
2 --black students adopted to white parents
Are these students biracial or is this a step parent situation where the child has two AA biological parents and a white step parent? I think it's an important distinction. Biracial kids look all kinds of ways, so a blanket treatment for them would be misleading. My biracial kid looks completely white.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You'll find the most diversity (in the superficial racial sense) at Murch, the wannabee M that its boosters keep trying to attach to JKLM.
Just curious, why shouldn't "Murch" be attached to JKLM?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm curious as to why JKLMM doesn't include E!H and S.
Why aren't Eaton, Hearst and Stoddert considered in the same league?
There is a qualitative difference with the JKLMM schools -- just about everyone who attends is in-boundary, and just about everyone who is in-boundary who goes to public school attends. This is starkly different from the rest of public education in DC, where roughly three quarters of kids don't attend thoeir in-boundary school. Eaton and Hearst are dominated by OOB kids so they don't fit that profile.
Stoddert is kind of a mixed bag.
NP. So you're saying because a school's profile isn't 100% IB, they don't earn a right to be considered just as top notch as JKLM. I call BS. In my perspective (and many non original JKLM parents), Stoddert, Eaton, Hearst should belong there if not more so because they are successful and diverse. PP that asked, many of us have already changed it to EHJKLMMORSS (it's just easier to type JKLM). The old guard doesn't want to allow others into the cool club for fear of it becoming a deluded pool. As if more successful schools will cause their property values to go down in the $100ks.
Anonymous wrote:Most of the commenters need their keyboards deactivated and their entitlement cards revoked!!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:With all of the discussion on AA boys in DCPS we would be very interested in hearing the perspective of parents of AA boys currently in elementary schools in the JKLMM cluster, We are currently IB for Janney.
A family I know had an AA son who attended Janney for a couple of years before transferring to a private school. He told me that his son was never invited to parties, which I found interesting. He said his son was hurt because the kids would talk about parties he was not invited to. If that is true, that speaks volumes about the students and parents.
My Black kids are invited and not excluded. They have good friends, white, Black, African, Asian, mixed, European, etc... They have not been singled out for being "active" or designated Special Ed.
Please take everything said on this board with a grain of salt.
Anonymous wrote:Janney second grade parent here. This post prompted me to get out the directory during this 2 hour delay.
In Janney second grade:
121 students
4 --black students with black parents
3 --black students with 1 white, 1 black parent
2 --black students adopted to white parents
Anonymous wrote:There is ONE AA child in PK (out of 80) kids at Janney this year and this child has white parents.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:With all of the discussion on AA boys in DCPS we would be very interested in hearing the perspective of parents of AA boys currently in elementary schools in the JKLMM cluster, We are currently IB for Janney.
A family I know had an AA son who attended Janney for a couple of years before transferring to a private school. He told me that his son was never invited to parties, which I found interesting. He said his son was hurt because the kids would talk about parties he was not invited to. If that is true, that speaks volumes about the students and parents.
Janney can be a very tough place socially regardless of race. You have the "in" kids/parents who are invited to everything and the "out" kids/parents who are invited to nothing. Thankfully the mafia mentality is dissipating in the younger grades as the school gets larger and is comprised almost entirely of 2 income families. (= less time to get overly involved in the school social scene).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:With all of the discussion on AA boys in DCPS we would be very interested in hearing the perspective of parents of AA boys currently in elementary schools in the JKLMM cluster, We are currently IB for Janney.
A family I know had an AA son who attended Janney for a couple of years before transferring to a private school. He told me that his son was never invited to parties, which I found interesting. He said his son was hurt because the kids would talk about parties he was not invited to. If that is true, that speaks volumes about the students and parents.
My Black kids are invited and not excluded. They have good friends, white, Black, African, Asian, mixed, European, etc... They have not been singled out for being "active" or designated Special Ed.
Please take everything said on this board with a grain of salt.