Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Imagine if fully one-third of your child’s class was comprised of kids who were simultaneously prone to physical violence, lacked intellectual curiosity and were flat out unable to behave themselves in a civilized manner. Welcome to middle school at DCI, an abject failure by any objective standard.
DCI is a public school that must educate everyone and meet kids (all of them) where they are. If they literally can’t engage 1/3 of the students, they need to retrain their teachers.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:People who want to talk about DCI without talking about preparedness in target languages, and level or rigor in language classes, can't see the forest for the trees. Kids coming up through feeders are supposed to be well positioned to ace IB Diploma language exams to help them stand out in college admissions. Language skills, especially in speaking and listening, are supposed to be one of their strong suits relative to the competition, after all those years in 50% of partial immersion! How lame that DCI probably won't even offer HL language classes.
If you want your kid to ace IBD math, middle school at BASIS would obviously be much better prep than the DCI experience. If you want them to ace IB humanities, middle school at Wash Latin, Deal or a private would obviously be much better prep.
Sorry, but on what basis are you speculating no HL classes? DCI is offering HL foreign language, not just SL. Starting with next year's Diploma Program students (that starts in 11th).
Anonymous wrote:We don't. Not satisfied with our 5th grade experience. Looking for more challenge, order, and MYP curriculum savvy on the part of admins. Moving on to a Condordia immersion camp, parochial school and MoCo weekend program.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DCI has more than enough customers who are fine with the current set up.
I can't see them changing it to please more ambitious parents and better students.
If you think DCI cant deal with ambitious parents, then they are in for a world of trouble from our feeder school.
which one?
Lamb Pcs
Sorry, not buying it. Ambition and DCI aren't synonymous, not yet.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DCI has more than enough customers who are fine with the current set up.
I can't see them changing it to please more ambitious parents and better students.
If you think DCI cant deal with ambitious parents, then they are in for a world of trouble from our feeder school.
which one?
Lamb Pcs
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:PP is spot on. Deal is good by DC standards by that means nothing. I know more than a few parents who were shocked when they finally moved to VA and their kids were in legitimately high performing schools, with real tracking and academic standards.
Agree!
Don't want to be shocked by my bright kid's unexceptional international baccalaureate, SAT, AP etc. scores 7 or 8 years from now.
DCI is a social experiment I'm not going to risk. My children speak one of the DCI languages taught at almost the native speaker level. But that's neither here nor there where DCI goes.
How is DCI a social experiment?
How fragile are your kids?
The curriculum has been around forever and is tried and true. Not sure why your obvious racism is causing you to panic.
Anonymous wrote:We don't. Not satisfied with our 5th grade experience. Looking for more challenge, order, and MYP curriculum savvy on the part of admins. Moving on to a Condordia immersion camp, parochial school and MoCo weekend program.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DCI has more than enough customers who are fine with the current set up.
I can't see them changing it to please more ambitious parents and better students.
If you think DCI cant deal with ambitious parents, then they are in for a world of trouble from our feeder school.
which one?