Anonymous wrote:Thank you OP, if you are still out there, for a board reminding me to be thankful for LAMB!! I honestly don't know how we get a bumper crop of native speakers in year after year, but thank heavens we do. From these posts, you wonder why most YY parents bother with Mandarin immersion when they sound like the last people to appreciate the Chinese. Those inbound schools must really suck.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Totally agree that second gen kids raise the bar in Chinese classes. That was my experience in high school, college, and graduate school. Actually, when I was in high school and got better grades than some of the second gen kids who spoke at home, they would get punished for not trying hard enough. The lack of second gen kids at Yu Ying is one of my concerns about the school, but if my kid gets in will probably take the slot.
Your DC will not get in, unfortunately due to sibling preference.
I would not be so sure PP. My DC received the call in late September for a PK spot. DC doesn't have any siblings.
How far down the waitlist did they get last yr for preK?
This yr, the siblings from the jumbo preK class, rising 1st, will be applying so there will be many more siblings than previous yrs for preK. But hopefully there will be some spots for the lottery.
Why are you so sure that so many families with kids in the bubble class have kids in that specific age range? Of the ~20 families in that class whose family structure I'm familiar with, only one or two have a rising PK kid.
You're the 3rd person to ask that PP about this, and they've had no response, which means they were talking out of their you know where and they can't back it up. Don't hold your breath for an explanation (and that mega 1st grade class is NOT an explanation, since even the school itself is not thinking that plus sibs from other grades will take up the whole PK entering class).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
If you really want a school with more native chinese speaking students, apply to Thompson ES. Oh no, too many FARMS, even among the catonese speaking students.
What a jerk you are. So bad for PR at our beloved YY that I hope somebody gives your kid a full ride to Sidwell very soon.
Don't worry about the FARMs Cantonese-speakers at Thompson. They're going to top colleges anyway. Would love to have them join the party, giving our pampered little pains a run for their money, in English and math as much as Chinese.
Much as you love to claim that most of the Chinese speakers with 4 year olds are beating down the door to get in, I assure you that the ethnic Thompson parents aren't applying. They're scraping together the dough to move to MoCo, having heard that YY isn't for dialect speakers with nobody from the school disabusing them of the notion.
Anonymous wrote:Thank you OP, if you are still out there, for a board reminding me to be thankful for LAMB!! I honestly don't know how we get a bumper crop of native speakers in year after year, but thank heavens we do. From these posts, you wonder why most YY parents bother with Mandarin immersion when they sound like the last people to appreciate the Chinese. Those inbound schools must really suck.
Anonymous[/quote wrote:
Point taken. "lets recruit more Mandarin speakers" happy. YY is a Mandarin school. While I admire your tenacity about giving dialect speakers preference, it simply is not going to happen.
Anonymous wrote:Thank you OP, if you are still out there, for a board reminding me to be thankful for LAMB!! I honestly don't know how we get a bumper crop of native speakers in year after year, but thank heavens we do. From these posts, you wonder why most YY parents bother with Mandarin immersion when they sound like the last people to appreciate the Chinese. Those inbound schools must really suck.
) but there are a lot of assumptions beyond simply asking good questions that are getting really really old.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Totally agree that second gen kids raise the bar in Chinese classes. That was my experience in high school, college, and graduate school. Actually, when I was in high school and got better grades than some of the second gen kids who spoke at home, they would get punished for not trying hard enough. The lack of second gen kids at Yu Ying is one of my concerns about the school, but if my kid gets in will probably take the slot.
Your DC will not get in, unfortunately due to sibling preference.
I would not be so sure PP. My DC received the call in late September for a PK spot. DC doesn't have any siblings.
How far down the waitlist did they get last yr for preK?
This yr, the siblings from the jumbo preK class, rising 1st, will be applying so there will be many more siblings than previous yrs for preK. But hopefully there will be some spots for the lottery.
Why are you so sure that so many families with kids in the bubble class have kids in that specific age range? Of the ~20 families in that class whose family structure I'm familiar with, only one or two have a rising PK kid.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Totally agree that second gen kids raise the bar in Chinese classes. That was my experience in high school, college, and graduate school. Actually, when I was in high school and got better grades than some of the second gen kids who spoke at home, they would get punished for not trying hard enough. The lack of second gen kids at Yu Ying is one of my concerns about the school, but if my kid gets in will probably take the slot.
Your DC will not get in, unfortunately due to sibling preference.
I would not be so sure PP. My DC received the call in late September for a PK spot. DC doesn't have any siblings.
How far down the waitlist did they get last yr for preK?
This yr, the siblings from the jumbo preK class, rising 1st, will be applying so there will be many more siblings than previous yrs for preK. But hopefully there will be some spots for the lottery.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
This does not surprise me and I'm generally pro YY. Which class? Prior to the current preK, YY has gone through their entire waitlist for preK so any favoritism like what happened to you really made no difference. At least this will make "let's recruit more native speakers" people happy.
I wouldn't be so sure, not when a minority of DC Chinese speaks Mandarin well enough to chat with an administrator in that dialect. Mandarin is akin to Classical Arabic for Arabs, something you learn in school vs. speak at home. You're a lot more likely to draw in an embassy family than an ordinary immigrant family by limiting your native-speaking prospective parents to Mandarin speakers. Sounds like that's what's done now, and only a dialect-speaking new administrator could fix it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
This does not surprise me and I'm generally pro YY. Which class? Prior to the current preK, YY has gone through their entire waitlist for preK so any favoritism like what happened to you really made no difference. At least this will make "let's recruit more native speakers" people happy.
Anonymous wrote:
If you don't like YY don't apply. Everyone knows, or should know, that YY cannot circumvent charter law. What many of you do not know is that a couple years back, YY did approach the charter board about amending the rules to get a greater percentage of native speakers, similar to LAMB's. I often wonder if that is how LAMB's cheating came to light, but I digress.
YY has reached out to the dwindling DC Chinese American community. As a matter of fact, some of the programs in after school are administered by members of the Chinese Center. I think many people on DCUM like to talk smack with half the facts.