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LT enrolled students by grade level, from audit on OSSE site
pres: 47 preK: 54 K: 36 1: 22 2: 21 3: 25 4: 28 5: 27 do they have only one section of grades 1 to 5? 3 sections of PreS & PreK? 2 sections of K? |
| Yes - 3 PS classes, 3 PK classes, 2K classes and 1 in the upper grades |
| so, at least we're only educating about 125 DC grandchildren, PG County residents! |
Well, of course, the status quo isn't going to welcome a full re-boot in the form of SWS elbowing their way in. It would take a a huge lift from IB families who have already given up on LT (many already at SWS) seeing this as an opportunity to create a real neighborhood school their kids might actually attend. This could be a huge plus for SWS or at least one of the better options available to them (having been through a good half dozen DCPS Chancellors, I strongly suspect getting the school out of the trailers may be even harder than it was getting into them) and a huge plus for IB LT families. DCPS is going to be closing schools. Period. Closures are coming. The Mayor has said it, the Chancellor has said it. This could save LT from being shuttered entirely, which would be a real tragedy for the surrounding neighborhood, and prevent SWS from getting sent God knows where. DCPS isn't biting on reopening Van Ness, so what's better than LT? Keeps SWS on the Hill, gives them a solid MS option, keeps Reggio at LT while providing the turnaround neighbors want to see in order to buy in. |
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How can a school's scores fall so rapidly?! Central Office proves yet again that they are incompetent by keeping this idiotic Cobbs woman still here:
DC CAS Math 2010: 75% DC CAS Math 2011: 52% DC CAS Reading 2010:74% DC CAS Reading 2011:46% http://profiles.dcps.dc.gov/Ludlow-Taylor+Elementary+School Source: |
| Don't the higher scores come from when they cheated? |
Almost certainly from cheating, yes, but nobody knows for certain. As has been pointed out, no heads rolled, no investigation, none planned. |
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This could save LT from being shuttered entirely, which would be a real tragedy for the surrounding neighborhood, and prevent SWS from getting sent God knows where.
Not sure it would be a tragedy if LT were to close. Having lived across the street for nearly a decade, I'd rather see a condo with retail go up on the site than for the school to continue to run as it has indefinitely. We're tired of the largely down-market crowd LT attracts and all those MD plate cars zipping up. DCPS doesn't seem to care if LT becomes a real neighborhood school (as opposed to merely an IB preschool). Maybe the idea that it would bode well for SWS to take root there will gain traction as parents weary of the trailers, but the Cluster has never had a great relationship with other Hill schools (long simmering Brent-Watkins tensions are testament to this). |
Uh, Watkins parent here. You're entitled to your opinion, but I just don't see it. I won't bore you with all the ways the Cluster and other Hill schools are working together, but suffice it to say I see a lot more pooled grant applications, Hill-wide events and collaboration than I do sniping and divisiveness. And since SWS will be leaving the Cluster in 2 weeks, it's not particularly relevant. |
| Didn't the Cluster sue Two Rivers and try to stop it from even coming into existance? |
Right, the real question is how could the scores rise so rapidly, but no one asked that. The assumption was that the technique of demanding results from principals and teachers was working! Passing out bonuses to adults and claiming that reform was successful were more important than making sure the kids had actually improved. |
| Cluster relations with other Hill schools have indeed improved, particularly in the last five years or so, but I still don't see SWS being housed at LT. The status quo would be v. difficult to change - not nearly enough IB parents pushing to do anything but vote with their feet after preS3, and not nearly enough interest by the SWS parents, yet anyway. Sorry to rain on the parade, but see LT being the same old same old school for a really long time, albeit, sooner or later, with a new principal and better looking building. DCPS almost certainly won't close LT, since it works for the population it primarily serves (especially the special needs program), and the pols can always point to IB enthusiasm for the preschool as a sign it is serving the neighborhood. And that's that. |
| +1. Yea, that about sums it up. If this long thread has accomplished nothing more, perhaps it will help parents, both IB and OOB, beating down the door to get into the LT preschool arrive, or move on, with their eyes wide open.... |
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Oh the Cluster distaste goes much deeper than any Watkins parent is willing to admit or see. Yes, they did lead the charge on suing Two Rivers. Plus now that Clusters have gladly gone ahead with pushing SH renovation date up while trying to leave the non-feeder schools behind.
The mentality that the Clusters are the only school on the Hill runs deep there. We are one of the many families who have tried the Clusters and run screaming to NW schools. It is so funny to look back and think about how we thought all of that was normal at one time. |
No to the 1st para, and mostly yes to the 2nd. There are NO PS3 classrooms at SWS. There haven't been any to date, and there will be none at the Annex. There MAY be PS3 at a future date, but it would not happen before the move to a permanent location. Peabody will have NO boundary preference for 2013-14 -- only sib priority. |