Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Grow up. If you're hell bent on taking offense, you'll invariably read too much into any given post to get there.
-Parent of Color who Doesn't Think Either Oyster-Adams or DCI is Worth It
So why are you posting here? Im confused.
We have experience with both Adams & DCI. Supplementing wore us out & cost plenty. When we got to MoCo, kid struggled to work at grade level despite years of excellent grades in DC public schools.
We have nothing to do with LAMB.
Best not to kid yourselves, folks.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Same concern. I'm told that my sibling's teens in MoCo are strongly encouraged to double up on IB and AP exams. They started taking AP exams in 9th grade, arranged by their public school.
Former DCI parent here, now in moco. This is true. My kid is taking her first AP exam in May. She is in 9th and supposedly in the easiest AP course. She was not prepared for the workload and had to learn notetaking as well as study skills. Can't blame it all on dci but middle school seems to be a weak link there as well as here in moco.
Anonymous wrote:Best not to be the troll who has to constantly validate their life choice to move to MOCO. Why do you care so much that you're always posting on a DC forum? Go live your best life in sterile MOCO.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Grow up. If you're hell bent on taking offense, you'll invariably read too much into any given post to get there.
-Parent of Color who Doesn't Think Either Oyster-Adams or DCI is Worth It
So why are you posting here? Im confused.
We have experience with both Adams & DCI. Supplementing wore us out & cost plenty. When we got to MoCo, kid struggled to work at grade level despite years of excellent grades in DC public schools.
We have nothing to do with LAMB.
Best not to kid yourselves, folks.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Grow up. If you're hell bent on taking offense, you'll invariably read too much into any given post to get there.
-Parent of Color who Doesn't Think Either Oyster-Adams or DCI is Worth It
So why are you posting here? Im confused.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Grow up. If you're hell bent on taking offense, you'll invariably read too much into any given post to get there.
-Parent of Color who Doesn't Think Either Oyster-Adams or DCI is Worth It
So why are you posting here? Im confused.
Anonymous wrote:Grow up. If you're hell bent on taking offense, you'll invariably read too much into any given post to get there.
-Parent of Color who Doesn't Think Either Oyster-Adams or DCI is Worth It
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DCi is essentially set up to help first gen college students of color get to good colleges. Just shooting for IB Diploma usually does the trick.
UMC families need to tink about hiring college counselors, doing their own college planning, and supplementing academically all the way up. DCI can still work for these families, but at a cost in time, money, research, hustle. I understand that JR isn't all that different where AP goes.
Shut up, how many students of color that go to DCI would be first generation college students? Not many. This was definitely written by a white person that lives in a bubble!
Anonymous wrote:DCi is essentially set up to help first gen college students of color get to good colleges. Just shooting for IB Diploma usually does the trick.
UMC families need to tink about hiring college counselors, doing their own college planning, and supplementing academically all the way up. DCI can still work for these families, but at a cost in time, money, research, hustle. I understand that JR isn't all that different where AP goes.
Anonymous wrote:DCi is essentially set up to help first gen college students of color get to good colleges. Just shooting for IB Diploma usually does the trick.
UMC families need to tink about hiring college counselors, doing their own college planning, and supplementing academically all the way up. DCI can still work for these families, but at a cost in time, money, research, hustle. I understand that JR isn't all that different where AP goes.
Anonymous wrote:Pp you’re knocking is correct. The majority of AMERICAN IBD schools are not private. Internationally, they are.