| You dont even get an interview for Walls without top grades. |
The curriculum is good enough to get into MIT for Mathematics, but not strong enough for you. Nice to know you have higher standards than MIT. |
One anecdotal college admission does not make a good curriculum, esp in math. Instead of touting the MIT admission on all threads related to Latin when people actually talk about the curriculum, why don’t you actually tell us concrete examples of how the curriculum at Latin is actually meeting the needs of high performing kids. |
I think Latin has more national merit schools per student than almost any school in the city, public, charter or private. The high performers are getting into great colleges. Not just MIT. Someone else this year is going to Yale. Another to Princeton. Michigan. NYU. And remember: the school is tiny. Each class is less than 100 people. |
Oft repeated but still incorrect. They are pure lottery. They give every kid an equal chance at an education. People like you are so invested in your hero complexes and protecting the pours and minorities that you forget that charters offer an exit for those same people you're so busy performatively worrying about. |
BASIS does. A reasonable person might take a step back and reflect on the fact that there is no way generalize about "all charters". But this is DCUM, so by all means, let's hear about the monolithic "charter". |
+1 And unlike Ward 3 schools, where seats are auctioned off to the highest bidders in the form of housing prices. |
They are pure lottery, but certain practices (entry year, location, promotion requirements) can make them functionally inaccessible to certain demographics. |
Another oft repeated, offensive and meaningless statement. What does this mean? Are you suggesting that if an individual charter school isn't a magic bullet to solve all education problems then it ought not exist? Do you have any idea how condescending it is to suggest the limitations of "certain demographics" based on your own biases? Your world view seems to be that poor (read: black) people just sit in squalor waiting for a white savior like you to open a school next door to them. I mean, FFS, you said the quiet part out that promotion requirements are a limitation to "certain demographics"!!!! |
| This whole thread is an advertisement for going private or leaving the District, just to escape this horribleness. Y'all are so exhausting. |
| there are a lot of reasons why all middle schools including latin and basis should start in 6th grade. its probably just a that ship has sailed sort of thing. but there are actually even some latin and basis families who would like this too. |
I'm saying a 5th grade entry year with limited to no backfilling means parents have to be thinking about middle school well before it's obvious. I'm saying a non-central campus with poor transit access means parents have to have another means of transportation and the time and/or money to make a school commute work. I'm saying promotion requirements that are significantly more rigid than DCPS lead to attrition that wouldn't happen at another school. Above could apply to anyone not in the know about the complexities of school choice in DC, anyone who can't or doesn't drive, anyone with a demanding job and limited childcare support, anyone whose kid struggles with standardized testing, etc. |
And yet people make it work. You sound insufferable. |
Since no one has given any specifics how Latin is able to meet the needs of high performers…….. |
It's so unfair when schools have fixed physical locations. What about the people who don't live nearby? It's also unfair when schools have "rules" and "policies" and "academic standards." What about people who hate rules, or who don't want to study, or who think policies are boring? What about them? Y'all need to check your privilege. |