Walls Versus DCI

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:DCI could improve things a lot by having kids test into the IB program between middle and high school but unfortunately the parents are too equity pilled at this point.


DCI motto is literally IB for all. This comment seems pretty out of touch.


Right. I mean, if you want an IB program that has only the most academically motivated or high-scoring or highly-graded kids - DCI isn't for you. That's just not the school it was ever meant to be or claimed it was. It's a public charter school with IB for all, open to all. It can be, and is, high quality in lots of other ways, and lots of kids do get IB diplomas, score high, etc. Whether your kid does is dependent on your kid and how much they take advantage of the opportunities they have. As a DCI high school parent (kid went to DCI middle school too) of a motivated/high-scoring/high-grades kid, it's also important to me that they have the opportunity to go to school with an incredible cross-section of DC kids.


Amen. We declined the offer of family money to send our kids to private schools, precisely because we didn't want to insulate them from the world. They have come out of DCI with everything we'd hoped for-- a good education, strong language skills, good test scores, good college admissions, and comfort in cultures near (like NE DC) and far (like Senegal).

https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/b/b2/Survivorship-bias.svg
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:DCI could improve things a lot by having kids test into the IB program between middle and high school but unfortunately the parents are too equity pilled at this point.


DCI motto is literally IB for all. This comment seems pretty out of touch.

Yes, this is a dumb motto and maybe they should change it and the mission (the Arlington model does seem good)


No it’s not. It is EXACTLY what they want.

There is always lots of naysayers and resistance to change and the status quo. Exhibit A all the insecure Walls families posting on here who have no kids at the school.

IB curriculum and courses should be available for all and for all to enrich from it. That is what DCI does. Then you can choose which track out of the 4 or 5 that is offered as you move up the grades. In addition, the school offers different levels of courses to meet all kids needs.

It’s a great concept and frankly quite revolutionary. The school is breaking the glass window of elitism.

And with the current stats of such a new school with so many kids getting college credits and IB scores, the school is definitely on an upward trajectory.


If the kids were getting into top international schools I’d agree. They’re not, they’re getting into second tier sub Durham schools in the UK, and not anything recognizable in France or Holland. The set of US schools is ok. If you’re happy with BC and BU… that’s great.



Please list any school that just graduated 5 or 6 classes where kids are getting into top international schools. That is why I said upward trajectory.

Let’s circle back in another 5 years and see.

The kids are getting low 30’s which is really good for a new IB school, especially one that does not select
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:DCI could improve things a lot by having kids test into the IB program between middle and high school but unfortunately the parents are too equity pilled at this point.


DCI motto is literally IB for all. This comment seems pretty out of touch.


Right. I mean, if you want an IB program that has only the most academically motivated or high-scoring or highly-graded kids - DCI isn't for you. That's just not the school it was ever meant to be or claimed it was. It's a public charter school with IB for all, open to all. It can be, and is, high quality in lots of other ways, and lots of kids do get IB diplomas, score high, etc. Whether your kid does is dependent on your kid and how much they take advantage of the opportunities they have. As a DCI high school parent (kid went to DCI middle school too) of a motivated/high-scoring/high-grades kid, it's also important to me that they have the opportunity to go to school with an incredible cross-section of DC kids.


Amen. We declined the offer of family money to send our kids to private schools, precisely because we didn't want to insulate them from the world. They have come out of DCI with everything we'd hoped for-- a good education, strong language skills, good test scores, good college admissions, and comfort in cultures near (like NE DC) and far (like Senegal).


I would 100% send my kid to private over DCI if we had the option. Kid is at DCI middle. I don’t see it as insulating them from the world but not exposing them to constant bad behavior and teachers who don’t bother to monitor what kids are doing online. They can be exposed to the world in many other ways.


I'm not arguing with you. But I would note that dealing with bad behavior IS living in the world.


There is plenty of bad behavior outside of school to teach kids this lesson.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:DCI could improve things a lot by having kids test into the IB program between middle and high school but unfortunately the parents are too equity pilled at this point.


DCI motto is literally IB for all. This comment seems pretty out of touch.


Right. I mean, if you want an IB program that has only the most academically motivated or high-scoring or highly-graded kids - DCI isn't for you. That's just not the school it was ever meant to be or claimed it was. It's a public charter school with IB for all, open to all. It can be, and is, high quality in lots of other ways, and lots of kids do get IB diplomas, score high, etc. Whether your kid does is dependent on your kid and how much they take advantage of the opportunities they have. As a DCI high school parent (kid went to DCI middle school too) of a motivated/high-scoring/high-grades kid, it's also important to me that they have the opportunity to go to school with an incredible cross-section of DC kids.


Amen. We declined the offer of family money to send our kids to private schools, precisely because we didn't want to insulate them from the world. They have come out of DCI with everything we'd hoped for-- a good education, strong language skills, good test scores, good college admissions, and comfort in cultures near (like NE DC) and far (like Senegal).


I would 100% send my kid to private over DCI if we had the option. Kid is at DCI middle. I don’t see it as insulating them from the world but not exposing them to constant bad behavior and teachers who don’t bother to monitor what kids are doing online. They can be exposed to the world in many other ways.



Well, we got into a highly regarded private and declined the offer. We applied to just see outcome and then weighed choices we had. Not worth the close to 60k price tag a year when you can get a good education at DCI and the IB diploma. I didn’t want my kid to be in a bubble of entitlement and wealth because you are insulating them from the world.

We know a family well with kid who started in middle and now in high school who is having a great experience. BTW kid is now on the 3rd language since did so well in 2nd and might be shooting for the bilingual certificate in the IB diploma.

I’m not discounting your experience but classroom management is also teacher and course dependent as everyone knows. Also my kid doesn’t care what other kids are doing online and can focus.


I am PP and this is very important for parents to consider. It’s great you have a kid that can sail through while ignoring the behavior and online activity, but many kids can’t. I firmly believe the school should be more restrictive. I agree that management is teacher dependent but I’ve been underwhelmed by the teachers. I am a teacher in the burbs and some stuff that’s happened in my kids class would never fly in most schools. Parents need to hear all perspectives, not just the few with super focused kids who can tune out the noise.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:DCI could improve things a lot by having kids test into the IB program between middle and high school but unfortunately the parents are too equity pilled at this point.


DCI motto is literally IB for all. This comment seems pretty out of touch.

Yes, this is a dumb motto and maybe they should change it and the mission (the Arlington model does seem good)


No it’s not. When a school applies to grt a charter it is approved or denied based partially on the mission of the school. They can’t just go and make a program application only. Their charter was approved on the given mission. And I think IB for all kids who want is a fine mission. If you don’t like it for your kid, move to Arlington. But remember they might not be accepted to that IB program.



What I find hilarious is all these posters saying that the school doesn’t track for all subjects in middle school. Spoiler alert no school in the city does that and charters can’t either with city mandates and guidelines. Blame it on the race to the bottom mentality of this city. It’s the easy way to close the gap and what a lot of DCPS schools do.

At least charters are more independent and not run by central office and can pick principals in the best interest of the school and not puppets that caters to central. I mean just compare the high school principals of the 2 schools discussed here.

As to Arlington’s program, it’s far from being great. If you are coming from DCI, kid will get in because they qualify with languages and the other 2 criteria is pretty low. But very limited course offerings, especially when it comes to languages, no immersion trips or study abroad, language clubs, etc…. With just under 200 kids in the program, it is very small and limited.


You have no idea what you're talking about. As has already been pointed out, nobody has to qualify the pre-IB Washington Liberty program because any 9th grader can register for pre-IB "intensified" classes in math, individuals and societies/social studies subjects, English and biology. But what W-L students can't do is take IBD classes in 11th grade if they haven't earned decent grades in their prerequisites. W-L teaches more languages to the IBD level than DCI, including Arabic. There certainly are active language clubs at W-L. Immersion camps are encouraged, particularly 4 or 8-week-long UVA summer language studies camps for college credit at in-state tuition for ages 16+. The W-L IBD program isn't small and limited. In fact, scores of W-L students who don't go on to earn the Diploma take IBD classes. They can do so freely if they've met prerequisites. The full Diploma track at W-L is reserved for strong students, attracting many from the Yorktown and Wakefield HS districts. We've had teens at both DCI and Washington Liberty. Have you?
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:DCI could improve things a lot by having kids test into the IB program between middle and high school but unfortunately the parents are too equity pilled at this point.


DCI motto is literally IB for all. This comment seems pretty out of touch.

Yes, this is a dumb motto and maybe they should change it and the mission (the Arlington model does seem good)


No it’s not. When a school applies to grt a charter it is approved or denied based partially on the mission of the school. They can’t just go and make a program application only. Their charter was approved on the given mission. And I think IB for all kids who want is a fine mission. If you don’t like it for your kid, move to Arlington. But remember they might not be accepted to that IB program.



What I find hilarious is all these posters saying that the school doesn’t track for all subjects in middle school. Spoiler alert no school in the city does that and charters can’t either with city mandates and guidelines. Blame it on the race to the bottom mentality of this city. It’s the easy way to close the gap and what a lot of DCPS schools do.

At least charters are more independent and not run by central office and can pick principals in the best interest of the school and not puppets that caters to central. I mean just compare the high school principals of the 2 schools discussed here.

As to Arlington’s program, it’s far from being great. If you are coming from DCI, kid will get in because they qualify with languages and the other 2 criteria is pretty low. But very limited course offerings, especially when it comes to languages, no immersion trips or study abroad, language clubs, etc…. With just under 200 kids in the program, it is very small and limited.


You have no idea what you're talking about. As has already been pointed out, nobody has to qualify the pre-IB Washington Liberty program because any 9th grader can register for pre-IB "intensified" classes in math, individuals and societies/social studies subjects, English and biology. But what W-L students can't do is take IBD classes in 11th grade if they haven't earned decent grades in their prerequisites. W-L teaches more languages to the IBD level than DCI, including Arabic. There certainly are active language clubs at W-L. Immersion camps are encouraged, particularly 4 or 8-week-long UVA summer language studies camps for college credit at in-state tuition for ages 16+. The W-L IBD program isn't small and limited. In fact, scores of W-L students who don't go on to earn the Diploma take IBD classes. They can do so freely if they've met prerequisites. The full Diploma track at W-L is reserved for strong students, attracting many from the Yorktown and Wakefield HS districts. We've had teens at both DCI and Washington Liberty. Have you?



Kids can’t do IB diploma track if they have not taken languages since 7th so no, many kids can’t do the track. It’s not because they can’t get a B average but because of the language pre-requisite.

WL yes has more languages but the actual courses are just SL and HL in the language and don’t offer any other variety of courses taught in the language such as literature, social studies, etc… It is very limited

Let’s be real here, the only kids doing IB in Arabic are native speakers because no school in Arlington is offering kids Arabic starting in 7th on, neither for the other languages in the IB diploma. Same with Mandarin, etc..

That is why the program is so small because Arlington public schools don’t have IB middle schools offering languages. And why it opens doors to other students just to get 150 kids or whatever.

The school does not provide any immersion programs abroad or study abroad. You need to do immersion in the summer on your own.
Anonymous
IBD requires strong writing and advance language acquisition. If the kids do not have both, they will not pass to get the diploma or if pass but not do well and score low in the mid 20’s.

That is why you cannot just have an IB diploma program in high school. You need to start acquiring writing and language skills much earlier. So if the kids are not in an IB program earlier, then families are heavily, heavily supplementing outside and at home especially in the language if the kid is nit from a native speaking family.

Even if coming from a native speaking family, you will likely have to supplement quite a bit because you need not just speaking and comprehension but also reading and writing to do well on the IB language test.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Above is total BS. No need whatsoever for students to study in IB elementary school, or in middle school for that matter, to ace IB work in high school. The country with the best IB results, and the most IB Diplomas per capita, is Hong Kong. Yet few Hong Kong public elementary and middle schools offer IB curriculum. What they do offer are strong academics and extensive middle school tracking across the board. I know this because I taught at an IB World HS in Hong Kong at one point. This school had no feeder school meaning that few of our students did IB work before HS. Even so, IB scores in the 40s weren’t unusual at our school!



What the PP above fails to say is that the academic culture in HK is toxic. There is a whole other school in Asia and especially in HK called cram schools. So the kids go to school all day then go to the cram school at night. It is totally crazy. All families who can afford to do it and the rat race is never ending. Even families who can’t afford it will scrimp and save and put all their savings to have their kids in cram schools. This data is very old, years ago but last time I looked it was 75% of kids go to cram schools. Only the poor don’t who can’t afford it.

What PP above also fails to say is that her school is likely taught in English and the kids have been in English taught schools, so immersion in the language, way before coming to her school. Probably their whole life.

The academic pressure to do well and expectations is off the roof in HK. It affects the kids self esteem, mental health, etc…HK has a silent epidemic of student suicides. It is among the highest in the developed world.

I would never live in HK and raise a kid there. Childhood is fleeting and not worth giving it up and the high cost to the rat race of doing well. What is even more sad is that unless you come from a wealthy family, these kids later still can’t afford to support themselves independently due to the high COL and high housing cost to buy a place.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Above is total BS. No need whatsoever for students to study in IB elementary school, or in middle school for that matter, to ace IB work in high school. The country with the best IB results, and the most IB Diplomas per capita, is Hong Kong. Yet few Hong Kong public elementary and middle schools offer IB curriculum. What they do offer are strong academics and extensive middle school tracking across the board. I know this because I taught at an IB World HS in Hong Kong at one point. This school had no feeder school meaning that few of our students did IB work before HS. Even so, IB scores in the 40s weren’t unusual at our school!



What the PP above fails to say is that the academic culture in HK is toxic. There is a whole other school in Asia and especially in HK called cram schools. So the kids go to school all day then go to the cram school at night. It is totally crazy. All families who can afford to do it and the rat race is never ending. Even families who can’t afford it will scrimp and save and put all their savings to have their kids in cram schools. This data is very old, years ago but last time I looked it was 75% of kids go to cram schools. Only the poor don’t who can’t afford it.

What PP above also fails to say is that her school is likely taught in English and the kids have been in English taught schools, so immersion in the language, way before coming to her school. Probably their whole life.

The academic pressure to do well and expectations is off the roof in HK. It affects the kids self esteem, mental health, etc…HK has a silent epidemic of student suicides. It is among the highest in the developed world.

I would never live in HK and raise a kid there. Childhood is fleeting and not worth giving it up and the high cost to the rat race of doing well. What is even more sad is that unless you come from a wealthy family, these kids later still can’t afford to support themselves independently due to the high COL and high housing cost to buy a place.

Pretty sure the school they’re talking about is HKIS, and while the culture there is stressful it’s mostly rich expats so it’s not cram school stressful.

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Above is total BS. No need whatsoever for students to study in IB elementary school, or in middle school for that matter, to ace IB work in high school. The country with the best IB results, and the most IB Diplomas per capita, is Hong Kong. Yet few Hong Kong public elementary and middle schools offer IB curriculum. What they do offer are strong academics and extensive middle school tracking across the board. I know this because I taught at an IB World HS in Hong Kong at one point. This school had no feeder school meaning that few of our students did IB work before HS. Even so, IB scores in the 40s weren’t unusual at our school!



What the PP above fails to say is that the academic culture in HK is toxic. There is a whole other school in Asia and especially in HK called cram schools. So the kids go to school all day then go to the cram school at night. It is totally crazy. All families who can afford to do it and the rat race is never ending. Even families who can’t afford it will scrimp and save and put all their savings to have their kids in cram schools. This data is very old, years ago but last time I looked it was 75% of kids go to cram schools. Only the poor don’t who can’t afford it.

What PP above also fails to say is that her school is likely taught in English and the kids have been in English taught schools, so immersion in the language, way before coming to her school. Probably their whole life.

The academic pressure to do well and expectations is off the roof in HK. It affects the kids self esteem, mental health, etc…HK has a silent epidemic of student suicides. It is among the highest in the developed world.

I would never live in HK and raise a kid there. Childhood is fleeting and not worth giving it up and the high cost to the rat race of doing well. What is even more sad is that unless you come from a wealthy family, these kids later still can’t afford to support themselves independently due to the high COL and high housing cost to buy a place.

Pretty sure the school they’re talking about is HKIS, and while the culture there is stressful it’s mostly rich expats so it’s not cram school stressful.



I don’t think so because HKIS is AP in high school, not IB.

BTW HKIS is preschool to 12th with a tuition of $112k to $130k per semester so you are looking at $224k to $260k a year. It is for the ultra wealthy.
Anonymous
PP above writes: [Arlington] Kids can’t do IB diploma track if they have not taken languages since 7th so no, many kids can’t do the track. It’s not because they can’t get a B average but because of the language pre-requisite.

WL yes has more languages but the actual courses are just SL and HL in the language and don’t offer any other variety of courses taught in the language such as literature, social studies, etc. It is very limited

Let’s be real here, the only kids doing IB in Arabic are native speakers because no school in Arlington is offering kids Arabic starting in 7th on, neither for the other languages in the IB diploma. Same with Mandarin, etc..

That is why the program is so small because Arlington public schools don’t have IB middle schools offering languages. And why it opens doors to other students just to get 150 kids or whatever.

The school does not provide any immersion programs abroad or study abroad. You need to do immersion in the summer on your own.

I write: Sure, let's "be real," versus pushing an inaccurate take on the quality of immersion/partial immersion instruction at DCI and in its feeders. Thomas Jefferson MS in Arlington uses IB Middle Years curriculum, requiring language from 6th grade. The school teaches Arabic and other languages via a virtual UVA program on demand. The other neighborhood middle schools provide language instruction, too, with Dorothy Hamm leading the pack (best MS language teachers in the system).

When my DCI middle schooler took social studies and PE in the target language we discovered what a gimmicky joke the arrangement was. Few students could handle content so the right-out-of-grad-school teachers often lapsed into English to teach, and accepted it in return. We've found that standards for speaking and understanding at W-L have been higher than at DCI (in top group for language instruction). I point out YuYing cut its immersion summer program a decade back and DC has no public universities offering summer immersion to teens at in-state tuition like VA does. Many of my kid's classmates in Arlington do weeks of summer immersion study, in this country and/or abroad, every year while hardly anybody we knew at a DCI feeder and at DCI bothered with it, even if they had the dough. Study abroad trips at DCI were fun, but pricey and didn't include serious immersion.

Arlington lets more than 50 OOB students per year lottery into W-L to pursue IBD alongside in-boundary W-L students. DCI/DCPCS has no such comprehensive system to attract and retain high school IBD talent. W-L doesn't offer IBD for all, preferring to serve only high-achieving and serious students, the way IBD is supposed to work. Without firm prerequisites, DCI's IBD program is undeniably watered down. The scarcity of native speakers at DCI off the Spanish track doesn't help either (different story at W-L).

We might have stuck around in DC for Walls if my 3.8 GPA kid had been given a fair shot of entry (wasn't even granted an interview).

You can't fool everybody here, PP. IBD-for-all at DCI is a drag and parents know it. Quality beats quantity in VA for us. DCI families who can afford private high school or crack Walls generally leave. By contrast, from what I've seen, in Arlington, committed IB families stay.
Anonymous
Same. We'd have stayed in DC public for Walls, supplementing for language. Decent language instruction at DCI wasn't worth missing out on a first-rate high school for.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Same. We'd have stayed in DC public for Walls, supplementing for language. Decent language instruction at DCI wasn't worth missing out on a first-rate high school for.



You and PP above you are outliers because not many DCI families leaving for burbs, Walls, or privates.

DCI has a very high retention rate, close to mid 90%. We know family who declined the Walls offer.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Same. We'd have stayed in DC public for Walls, supplementing for language. Decent language instruction at DCI wasn't worth missing out on a first-rate high school for.



You and PP above you are outliers because not many DCI families leaving for burbs, Walls, or privates.

DCI has a very high retention rate, close to mid 90%. We know family who declined the Walls offer.


Retention rate doesn’t mean people are thrilled. Kids at DCI might stay because they don’t have another option. Not that many DCI kids get into Walls. We are at DCI middle school and would absolutely take a spot at Walls if it’s an option. I know a bunch of DCI kids and don’t know anyone that turned down Walls for DCI. Glad to have info on other options from PPs.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Same. We'd have stayed in DC public for Walls, supplementing for language. Decent language instruction at DCI wasn't worth missing out on a first-rate high school for.



You and PP above you are outliers because not many DCI families leaving for burbs, Walls, or privates.

DCI has a very high retention rate, close to mid 90%. We know family who declined the Walls offer.


Sure, but where else are these kids going to go if the families don't love DCI? The better-off families we know there--friends and neighbors of many years--leave for privates between middle and high school. Families or lesser means have stayed but the parents talk about how they dearly wish they had a better option. They'd skip the hour-long commute from Ward 6 SE by public transportation in a heartbeat for their teens if they had a decent option that didn't include it. That seems to be half the reason these families try for Walls - an easy commute by Metro from Capitol Hill. Nobody seems to love IBD for all at DCI. Most of these families are there because they struck out in the Latin and BASIS lotteries years ago.
post reply Forum Index » DC Public and Public Charter Schools
Message Quick Reply
Go to: