Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:GDS is a very diverse school and the rowing team looked fantastic at a regatta the other day.
And everyone had a good long view of them because they were going so slowly behind the rest of the pack
Why the hating on GDS?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:GDS is a very diverse school and the rowing team looked fantastic at a regatta the other day.
And everyone had a good long view of them because they were going so slowly behind the rest of the pack
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My son is a minority who pays full tuition and he participates in crew. He's not the only one. Check your preconceived notions.
That's nice, but it's an overwhelmingly white sport in college and high schools.
And basketball has become overwhelmingly a sport for Afrocan-American makes. What of it? (or should teams put a quota on A-A's in order to have more diverse teams?)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:too expensive. we had to stop.
No diversity at HS level bc of the cost.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My son is a minority who pays full tuition and he participates in crew. He's not the only one. Check your preconceived notions.
That's nice, but it's an overwhelmingly white sport in college and high schools.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My son is a minority who pays full tuition and he participates in crew. He's not the only one. Check your preconceived notions.
That's nice, but it's an overwhelmingly white sport in college and high schools.
If people are serious about promoting socioeconomic diversity, the school crew clubs would earmark a significant amount of money for financial aid and make it clear that the school, not the parents, is in charge of the aid determination. That way not just the full-paying AA/Latino/White kids can row. Saying "rich people of every color can participate" is not a great recipe for diversity.
Why doesn't this happen? I will posit that it is for one of two reasons: (1) cost -- it's pricey to have to raise the money not just to fund the club and those sleek Vespoli shells, but to have a big enough pool to cover all potential financial aid need from year to year; and (2) competition -- parents who see crew as a potential ticket to a better college for their child don't have an incentive to expand the pool of potential competitors for places on the team.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My son is a minority who pays full tuition and he participates in crew. He's not the only one. Check your preconceived notions.
That's nice, but it's an overwhelmingly white sport in college and high schools.
Anonymous wrote:My son is a minority who pays full tuition and he participates in crew. He's not the only one. Check your preconceived notions.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:GDS is a very diverse school and the rowing team looked fantastic at a regatta the other day.
And everyone had a good long view of them because they were going so slowly behind the rest of the pack
Anonymous wrote:ah...all those schools being mentioned, I did a few threads back - forgot Blair though, SJC and Dematha. Didn't see any diversity in Churchill or Whitman or GZ, not too sure about WJ. Don't remember seeing any AA on the VA teams, but will take a look this Saturday..
Actually just take a look here as most schools are represented. http://www.sportgraphics.com/events/stotesbury-cup-regatta-2014