Except they did fix middle schools. Hobson got $40 million. EH and Jefferson got additional $$ in the Ward 6 Middle School Reform Plan. I'm not saying they did it right, but from leadership perspective they kow towed to gentrifiers. |
And yet Brent is keeping apace with JKLMM in terms of overall proficiency and percentage of students testing 5 on the PARCC in spite of the achievement gap and the mass exodus of high-SES families after Fourth Grade. Brent can't win. Either it gets dinged for lack of diversity despite admitting AA kids at K and above via the lottery or it gets dinged because the achievement gap is a drag on overall test scores. Brent is far from perfect but it only began to attract higher-SES families within the past decade and has realized that some kids are a year or two ahead in math and therefore has been offering advanced pullouts for a couple of years now. DCPS found a way to attract these families through the ECE program and some modest renovations. The ball is still in DCPS's court for MS. If Latin or DC Prep or KIPP can find a way to make it work then Henderson better do the same. |
that's one school not plural, and promises over the next 3 years for EH and Jefferson don't amount to much if you have an upper ES student. There's more to providing a "fix" than improving facilities. Introducing IB at EH is a baby step forward but declining enrollment and lack of buy-in at EH or Jefferson (or SH for that matter) shows a lack of understanding about what the community wants, which is a comprehensive MS. Nobody is satisfied with the current piecemeal landscape. |
Ah, someone from Central Office chimes in. Please tell us exactly what has been done to modernize Jefferson and Eliot-Hince since the "Reform Plan" was supposed to have been implemented. My understanding is that neither DCPS nor DGS has been able to account for millions allocated for windows and other capital expenditures at EH. It was a group of motivated parents who embarrassed Bowser into making some basic repairs to restrooms last year. As for the Cluster, they got pretty much everything they wanted now that funds for the modernization of Watkins were reprogrammed so I will let them speak for themselves. |
PS. I also would take issue with the view that DCPS kowtowed to gentrified. If anything, it kowtowed to the interests of families from Wards 7 and 8 who were active in the Cluster. Some inbound families ultimately benefitted from the modernization of SH but then again DCPS pulled SWS from the Cluster and refused to consider granting proximity preference. From all appearances, DCPS made sure that the majority of families moving on to SH for many years did not live on the Hill when Brent and Maury got pushed aside. This was simply good ole fashioned Chocolate City politics. |
Wouldn't that be DCPS? How exactly did Brent turn around other than having a significant number of non-economically disadvantaged families enroll their kids into the school when it was majority economically disadvantaged? |
A couple hundred students aren't a significant number against the backdrop of the 45,000 students in DCPS. DCPS can't even manage to convince a majority of Cluster families to commit to SH. |
That's a funny way to look it. SWS not receiving an unprecedented preference is somehow "Chocolate City Politics"? |
Why was SWS moved out of the Cluster in the first place? Losing IB preference was the really big loss. |
You sound like a bizarro version of The Plan not exactly a flood of OOB seats offered. Watkins enrollment has been strategically lowered from 500 SY14-15 to 435 for SY16-17 Watkins 24 total OOB spots offered for SY15-6 1st: 3 2nd: 11 3rd: 6 4th: 2 5th: 2 17 total OOB spots offered for SY15-6 1st: 3 2nd: 1 3rd: 1 4th: 10 5th: 2 20 total OOB spots offered for SY16-17 1st: 4 2nd: 4 3rd: 8 4th: 4 5th: 4 Stuart Hobson 15 total OOB spots offered for SY15-16 6th: 5 7th: 5 8th: 5 12 total OOB spots offered for SY15-16 6th: 5 7th: 5 8th: 2 18 total OOB spots offered for SY16-17 6th: 8 7th: 5 8th: 5 |
SWS and proximity preference is a total non-sequitur |
Not the PP, but your "fix" was a rant and not particularly illuminating or helpful. I've known plenty of people in my life that rose from poverty and unenriching childhoods to great achievement. They all pursued their educations unrelentingly, and with little to no encouragement from their families. They were fortunate to have some exceptional teachers along the way who recognized their gifts and encouraged them. Your little screed suggests that nothing can be done for someone born into those circumstances, but the fact of the matter is that it's simply not true. |
The point is that poor kids don't get to go to high performing schools with highly effective teachers, by and large. https://edtrust.org/wp-content/uploads/Ed%20Trust%20Facts%20on%20Teacher%20Equity.pdf |
Is it fully enrolled yet? |
That's true to some extent, but they also lag behind their more affluent peers even when they do enroll in higher performing schools with highly effective teachers.. That's the bigger issue. |