My re-collection is different but it sounds like you know better than I do but either criteria would better serve disadvantaged kids and also further the goal of having more economic diversity WOTP than we have today. So why hasn't DCPS gotten there? |
| I would say Deal has a wide range of income levels, especially compared to area private schools. A bit of the 5%ers, a bit of the economically disadvantaged and a lot of the in between. |
Because WOTP has a lot of bigots and Deal is oversubscribed. |
My hunch -- it was Catania's brainchild (and he's gone). WOTP has made sufficient noise about overcrowding that no one can imagine squeezing in another 10% of kids. No political appetite to kick out current OOB students and replacing with all at-risk kids. |
If there was a WOTP discussion about transitioning the OOB population to a more disadvantaged population (which would have no impact on enrollment) I missed it so while your latter assertion maybe true your prior one was not as far as I can tell. |
Back in the GW Bush days, No Child Left Behind allowed students at a failing school to transfer to a better one. But that program has ended. The subsequent DC plan was always to set aside 10% of seats at high performing schools for at-risk students. Came up during boundary review, but has never been implemented. |
I thought this was only supposed to kick in if a school didn’t have a high OOB % already then you’d get at risk preference in lottery. |
OK here. Thanks. What is likely to be on this? Guess I will hit an open house next month. Much appreciated. |
Thanks! |
The tests determine what level of math your child will be placed in. Not sure if they do any other tracking. |
| I have heard they have switched from the summer test to evaluating sixth graders in class and then placing them in a particular math class. Can anyone confirm this? |
For children in a feeder elementary school but OP’s dc is at a private. |
| Sorry, i meant that all sixth graders entering Deal are assessed and then placed during the first weeks of school regardless of what school they attended for fifth. Rather than having a test over the summer. Is this accurate? |
| It seems to change every year. The current 9th, 8th, 7th and 6th grades all had different placement methods. I have a 5th grader in a feeder, and we haven't yet heard how they will do math it for the rising class. |
| This year (current 6th graders) they started everyone in the same on-level class, tested them all and then moved kids up as needed. |