Way more? Have you ever driven past Roosevelt HS? |
Here's my guess -- schools are kept in decent condition because parents complain if not - and maybe do some week-end and playground clean up themselves, if needed. Parents pay extra into a fund for supplies and aides in the classes to make it easier for teachers to handle the kids and thus for the kids to learn. "good" teachers get transferred there after a few years in less desirable schools because they want their lives to be a little easier. These schools have a pick of staff because they are desirable -- that is in a safe neighborhood with students prepared to learn with strong parental support. There is a strong community feeling because most of the parents live in the neighborhood and are socially and financially invested in it. Pretty simple stuff really. You don't have to be high SES, but it helps to be middle class and ambitious for your children's education. |
I thought for years that Roosevelt was closed, but nope...it really is an operational school. Scary..... |
Can't access the link either. Anyone able to post the content or summarize the important points. Why Abigail Smith is choosing to release the information with only a few school days left --- is beyond me. It was supposed to come out in May! She should be held accountable. Now it will be much more difficult to organize and discuss. The whole thing wreaks of a f--k you patronizing attitude to the parents of this City. It is very difficult not to question her motives, I do pray she is gone w the next administration. |
I have the Wilson one saved; neglected to save the Hardy one. There's nothing to post for the Wilson one because it's really just a map. The text says that Hardy, Deal, Adams feed to Wilson. The text for the Hardy one was more important because it included the feeders. But based on the Wilson map and the Hardy map, it's obvious what the Deal feeders are - process of elimination. |
BTW, still nothing on the Washington Post website. DCUM beats the Post, again, by several hours! |
Presumably the Post is making an interactive map, so I'd give them a few extra hours ![]() |
Please share what was on the site. No longer accessible. |
The Post is adhering to the embargo. DCUM was neither asked nor agreed to honor an embargo. With that in mind: Here is the Hardy letter: http://imgur.com/1vBUwWl and here is the Wilson letter: http://imgur.com/YFerehm |
Over $100 m spent in Ballou and Eastern EACH, despite abismal results. Do you know what you're talking about? |
What time does embargo end? |
No idea. |
Thanks so much for posting! Really appreciate all of your efforts! |
People are always forgetting about the factor of per-pupil funding vis a vis the No Child Left Behind requirement that students at failing schools be given the option to transfer to a performing school. That's what sent a lot of kids WOTP in the mid-2000s. The more students enrolled, the more money a school gets, and the better they do, the more autonomy they have for unique programming. It's a nice virtuous cycle, which "engaged" parents are riding, not pushing.
Exactly the opposite happens in the schools that lost these students. The ridiculous PS-8 and 6-12 education campus were brought into play to consolidate student populations. The needs of 7th grader are very different from a preschooler, but there just aren't enough of them in a school to get even the basics. By the way, DC is not even in the top ten for per pupil funding: http://www.usatoday.com/story/money/business/2014/06/07/states-spending-education/10083569/ |
The paint is not even dry on those projects and they both came after the Wilson/Deal upgrades. |