Not a fan of Principal Young based on his exclusionary practices of the many families shut out of PS3/PK4. Would rather the school move towards accommodating more kids at PK4 and eliminating PS3 rather than have second class citizens.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would have preferred Latin as big 'Up Yours" to the Jefferson feed and an acknowledgement that many families will leave for Latin and BASIS, where Latin is a requirement. Plus, in 45 minutes a week, language instruction is worthless. At least learning Latin roots would help with vocabulary.
The new language offerings in elementary DCPS are lipstick on a pig and will not offset any family truly interested I language instruction. I predict they will end in the next 5 years in place of more PE to offset health concerns or music to help with math.
+1 it also takes resources away from better, more age appropriate instruction at various levels. I'm not against language development and there's clearly demand for immersion, but it's a blunt instrument which doesn't really compete with immersion or offer pedagogic value unless the families make an extracurricular effort. If I need push multiple days of afterschool language to make the instruction remotely useful I'd rather just stick to that plan instead of the time invested during school day. Not to mention being forced into whichever language a school chooses even if it's not a preference. Latin at least has practical value for everyone.
Another vote for Latin, it just seems like the best use of that 45 minute/once a week time.
Also, I can't help but notice how many of the critiques of Young's leadership relate to how it effects parents, and not how it effects students.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would have preferred Latin as big 'Up Yours" to the Jefferson feed and an acknowledgement that many families will leave for Latin and BASIS, where Latin is a requirement. Plus, in 45 minutes a week, language instruction is worthless. At least learning Latin roots would help with vocabulary.
The new language offerings in elementary DCPS are lipstick on a pig and will not offset any family truly interested I language instruction. I predict they will end in the next 5 years in place of more PE to offset health concerns or music to help with math.
+1 it also takes resources away from better, more age appropriate instruction at various levels. I'm not against language development and there's clearly demand for immersion, but it's a blunt instrument which doesn't really compete with immersion or offer pedagogic value unless the families make an extracurricular effort. If I need push multiple days of afterschool language to make the instruction remotely useful I'd rather just stick to that plan instead of the time invested during school day. Not to mention being forced into whichever language a school chooses even if it's not a preference. Latin at least has practical value for everyone.
Anonymous wrote:I would have preferred Latin as big 'Up Yours" to the Jefferson feed and an acknowledgement that many families will leave for Latin and BASIS, where Latin is a requirement. Plus, in 45 minutes a week, language instruction is worthless. At least learning Latin roots would help with vocabulary.
The new language offerings in elementary DCPS are lipstick on a pig and will not offset any family truly interested I language instruction. I predict they will end in the next 5 years in place of more PE to offset health concerns or music to help with math.
Anonymous wrote:We've been on the Hill since the 90s. The parents we know at Brent who like Young are your garden-variety neighborhood high SES parents.
If you're vaguely offbeat and ask for a little flexibility to do your own thing for good reason, best of luck. He's a very conservative leader who won't stick his neck out for a family in difficulty.
Many of us disliked the way he managed the language chance, sending the Chinese teachers packing after failing to support their work for several years, imposing Latin on us all, then racing ahead to impose Spanish on us all. His handling of the language chance speaks to his disdain for meaningful parental involvement. He treats his parents like a cash machine - you get no say in how things work unless you join the clubby PTA Board or are voted on the LSAT, but come under heavy pressure to pay up anyway.
Anonymous wrote:What is wrong with Principal Young, I heard he was doing a pretty good job.