| I think that east of rock creek would be the relevance here |
It does not. Everyone and their mothers love to read and comment on the MD schools forum (especially if it's about MCPS ), so PP got confused of which forum she was. |
great post |
fascinating |
Interesting. Probably helps to explain why two of the 4 or 5 middle school clusters with the largest number of kids who were qualified for the Magnet (and who therefore did not get in thanks to peer cohort) were SSIMS and Sligo. Tons of highly educated parents who work in the government or non profit or have one parent (very often with a graduate degree) staying at home/ working part time.
The achievement gap is largely a symptom of SES differences which in the DMV tends to track closely with educational differences. You can get rid of high school exams, and move the selection criteria for magnets away from test scores but you cannot change the underlying cause- no school system can |
| We all know it is the same blair booster talking to your self, no one is fascinated |
By far most of the people in silver spring are not close to a 250K double fed family. Most people in Potomac are at least that. That is the difference and if you don’t think the burden of the dregs of society aren’t a factor of an area’s QOL then you’re naive |
Silver Spring is enormous. I doubt you are actually familiar with most of it. In 20901 and 20910 $250k is fairly typical. Based on what I and my neighbors do for a living, I’d say that’s the norm in our neighborhood. But I don’t expect someone who talks about “the dregs if society “ to believe that. But you are only showing your ignorance. |
| We bought a modest house in the low 7 figures near SS a few years back. Our house is nothing special for the area. It's convenient to the metro and located in a charming old neighborhood. Most people here could live anywhere in the county they want to but liked the character of this area better than the more generic choices. Sure, the schools are more diverse, but to bring this full circle, there's also a strong high achieving cohort. |
Sums it up. |
A modest million-dollar house near Silver Spring that's convenient to the Metro? |
Exactly, the theory expressed above might work for a couple of ES, but it doesn't explain at all whats going on in every ES school in Silver Spring. SS is full of people in all categories who make far less than 250K and if that is the case it should be reflected in achievement if SES is so important. |
I’d assume PP meant low 700s but I could be wrong. |
Not the PP but there are many historic homes near the Takoma metro in that range. |
At the population level, some of that is reflected in test scores and college matriculation rates. But at the individual level, kids who are demographically similar perform similarly across the county. So a MC/UMC kid with engaged and educated parents will have the same outcome whether their parents stay in their "starter house" in Takoma Park, or leverage to the eyeballs to move west. The outcomes are the same for those kids because the advantages that are conferred by engaged and educated parents are the same. No one is arguing that Silver Spring schools are full to the rafters with kids whose parents make $250K or more. Most Silver Spring and Takoma Park schools are economically and racially integrated, which residents view as a feature, not a bug. I also don't want to overlook high achieving kids whose parents aren't high earners. We have many of those on the east side as well. But if we're talking about an apples to apples comparison of middle class kids with good supports, the data shows those kids are going to do well no matter what and it is neither necessary nor preferable to choose segregated schools in order to "ensure" good outcomes. |