Do you mean the resources donated by the parents? |
| off the rails, people. off the rails. |
| I think the issue that everyone is dancing around is class. It’s considered fine to be “diverse” so long as they aren’t poor. And we all know that DCUM is afraid of the poor students - who in DC are predominantly Black and Hispanic - coming from homes with anything less than white-collar jobs with highly educated parents. It’s terrifying. Washingtonians aren’t necessarily racists as much as elitist and classist. And in DC class is divided by class. We don’t have a large population of working poor whites. If we did, those students wouldn’t be wanted at the high performing schools either. |
* And in DC class is divided by race. |
Of the students in DCPS as of SY 19/20 74% of the 51k kids are economically disadvantaged. That leaves about 13k students across all schools who are not. DCPS operates 117 schools. So you could spread all those children out and have 113 non economically disadvantaged students at each school in DCPS. Do you really think that number would be concentrated enough at schools the size of Wilson to make it have any additional resources? It also presumes that all or most of the 26% are in some position to donate in large amounts and do so. It also assumes that non economically disadvantaged students are spread equally across the grade spectrum. I would hazard a guess that you find larger concentrations of these populations in the lower elementary grades across the system. There are not enough non economically disadvantaged students in all of DCPS to spread them across the schools like some panacea for fixing the issues in failing schools. |
I used to believe that DCPS is interested in serving low SES families but I no longer do. We have failing schools full of low SES kids across the city with no improvement in their outcomes. DCPS is interested in covering up their failures by sending these kids to schools with higher performing kids, or sending higher performing kids to these schools. It’s lazy and doomed to fail because the higher performing kids have the means to leave if they don’t like the hand they are dealt. I feel for DCPS in a way because there is no way that school alone can help the issues plaguing many children in wards 7 & 8. |
| I was told there was a proposal where Janney would feed to Hardy -- but don't see that here. Were they mistaken? |
I really don't think it's this. The problem is massive and overcrowded elementary schools, feeding 1 (soon to be 2) massive and overcrowded MS, feeding 1 massive and overcrowded HS. DC government wants set aside seats for (1) At-Risk kids AND (2) extra capacity for well-to-do OOB kids whose parents don't want to utilize their local schools because these are both influential political constituencies. DC politicos don't want to make the hard choice of taking away Hardy-Deal/Wilson from the wealthy OOB kids, which this is EXACTLY what needs to happen to make Cardozo, Coolidge, and other under-enrolled facilities become "the next Wilson." And this is why DC has frantically started construction on two new schools WOTP, hopefully in time for the next Mayoral election. The Mayor is buttering her bread. |
If DCPS really wanted the high SES inboundary students your thinking of to go to Cardozo, Coolidge, Roosevelt they'd build the programming that would attract them. AP classes for one. Instead they create programming around things like culinary arts (Roosevelt). Where I grew up our county has a specialized school focused on things like HVAC, plumbing, stylist/beauticians, carpentry, secretarial work. Why doesn't DC have any sort of school focused on non-college paths? |
What a great way to add to traffic congestion... Maybe we could create equity with a rule that no one can go to a school within walking distance. |
I believe it's a possibility under Option 4 -- I have seen elsewhere that Janney is a candidate for one of the elementary schools that would shift to Hardy if the MacArthur property becomes a new Hardy MS: See page 16, Scenario 4: "Two elementary schools shift from Deal to Hardy in SY23-24" |
I actually don't think this is true. Most White UMC are willing to accept a minority of POC UMC peers into their groups -- the moment educated POC become the majority, white people flee. |
Where has that ever happened? |
And they have involved parents who are highly educated, read to their kids and are frequently two-parent families. Schools simply cannot overcome that opportunity gap. Yes sometimes through charter schools, but just applying to a charger school is an indication of parental involvement. |
In PP’s imaginings that is what would happen |