Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Krieger is coming off as a total ass on AEM right now. Dude, don't tout your resume in Arlington. Every other person has an advanced degree. No one is impressed with you.
Well he finally wised up and signed off. That was not a pretty set of exchanges. He never should have tried to engage in that forum, which shows all the more that he's not ready for SB.
Has anyone noticed that a handful of staunch Key supporters who were literally screaming about their concern for the low income kids in the Key neighborhood last fall are now standing behind this guy’s thinly veiled stance of “teach more so my privileged white kids don’t fall behind on their Harvard trajectories.” I wasn’t on their side with the swap but I wanted to believe that some of them were expressing real concerns for real people. How naive of me. It really was just about keeping their kids on Key.
I’m glad a global pandemic hasn’t stopped you from obsessing over your dislike for Key parents and posting your feelings about it in DCUM.
There are a few representatives earning the dislike one interaction at a time. Unfortunately they claim to speak for the entire school, despite being a minority of the parents there.
Sorry, but not everyone who thinks learning should continue is a monster. The sanctimony of the original poster ... geesh. Get over the weird Key-hating fetish.
Anonymous wrote:The Arlington Education Association endorsed Cristina. https://aeava.org/
Anonymous wrote:The Arlington Education Association endorsed Cristina. https://aeava.org/
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I thought Steven's answers on the SEPTA questionnaire were surprisingly nuanced and informed.
Ha! I'm not that surprised. He strikes me as very intelligent and even (mostly) well intentioned. I just think he hasn't run a strong campaign (the emails thing has been a little weird and he seems a little out of touch). I also really don't like that he thinks one of his big selling points is that he has the youngest kids.
Btw, did anyone catch it the other night at the ATS/Key forum when Priddy tried to claim that he's the only one with black children and, therefore, the only one who can understand some of those issues? Wonder what Symone thought of that argument?
I didn't hear Priddy say that. In fact, I've never heard him refer to the racial make-up of his family at all.
He did say he's the only one with kids in elementary and middle school, I think.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I thought Steven's answers on the SEPTA questionnaire were surprisingly nuanced and informed.
Ha! I'm not that surprised. He strikes me as very intelligent and even (mostly) well intentioned. I just think he hasn't run a strong campaign (the emails thing has been a little weird and he seems a little out of touch). I also really don't like that he thinks one of his big selling points is that he has the youngest kids.
Btw, did anyone catch it the other night at the ATS/Key forum when Priddy tried to claim that he's the only one with black children and, therefore, the only one who can understand some of those issues? Wonder what Symone thought of that argument?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I thought Steven's answers on the SEPTA questionnaire were surprisingly nuanced and informed.
Ha! I'm not that surprised. He strikes me as very intelligent and even (mostly) well intentioned. I just think he hasn't run a strong campaign (the emails thing has been a little weird and he seems a little out of touch). I also really don't like that he thinks one of his big selling points is that he has the youngest kids.
I agree with all of this. Not sure if he has a chance, but he is growing on me - to my surprise!
Anonymous wrote:I thought Steven's answers on the SEPTA questionnaire were surprisingly nuanced and informed.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Krieger is coming off as a total ass on AEM right now. Dude, don't tout your resume in Arlington. Every other person has an advanced degree. No one is impressed with you.
Well he finally wised up and signed off. That was not a pretty set of exchanges. He never should have tried to engage in that forum, which shows all the more that he's not ready for SB.
Has anyone noticed that a handful of staunch Key supporters who were literally screaming about their concern for the low income kids in the Key neighborhood last fall are now standing behind this guy’s thinly veiled stance of “teach more so my privileged white kids don’t fall behind on their Harvard trajectories.” I wasn’t on their side with the swap but I wanted to believe that some of them were expressing real concerns for real people. How naive of me. It really was just about keeping their kids on Key.
I’m glad a global pandemic hasn’t stopped you from obsessing over your dislike for Key parents and posting your feelings about it in DCUM.
There are a few representatives earning the dislike one interaction at a time. Unfortunately they claim to speak for the entire school, despite being a minority of the parents there.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Krieger is coming off as a total ass on AEM right now. Dude, don't tout your resume in Arlington. Every other person has an advanced degree. No one is impressed with you.
Well he finally wised up and signed off. That was not a pretty set of exchanges. He never should have tried to engage in that forum, which shows all the more that he's not ready for SB.
Has anyone noticed that a handful of staunch Key supporters who were literally screaming about their concern for the low income kids in the Key neighborhood last fall are now standing behind this guy’s thinly veiled stance of “teach more so my privileged white kids don’t fall behind on their Harvard trajectories.” I wasn’t on their side with the swap but I wanted to believe that some of them were expressing real concerns for real people. How naive of me. It really was just about keeping their kids on Key.
I’m glad a global pandemic hasn’t stopped you from obsessing over your dislike for Key parents and posting your feelings about it in DCUM.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Sandy raised a good point about how losing FLES means that the special ed teachers lose that time to collaborate with the lead teachers. I didn't even know that was a thing but it makes total sense.
OK, but you don't keep FLES just because it has a significant side benefit. You keep FLES because it's doing what it's supposed to do (there should be some way of measuring its success), and get rid of it if it's not (and can't be fixed).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Sandy raised a good point about how losing FLES means that the special ed teachers lose that time to collaborate with the lead teachers. I didn't even know that was a thing but it makes total sense.
OK, but you don't keep FLES just because it has a significant side benefit. You keep FLES because it's doing what it's supposed to do (there should be some way of measuring its success), and get rid of it if it's not (and can't be fixed).