Busing in kids who come from families that prioritize academics provides a good influence to lower SES kids who would not normally be exposed to such students. If MCPS really wants to help URM/lower SES students, they would continue these programs. You are who you surround yourself with. Otherwise these academically talented students will stay within their higher SES bubble and continue their success there, no problem. |
I’m not sure what your point is. My point is that I object to the false sense that MCPS provides equal opportunity for programming (criteria or choice programs) via lotteries, instead of providing the same programs at all schools. It’s an out for them, and it results in unequal access for students. Why can’t each elementary school have the CES curriculum? Why can’t each middle school have a STEM class? And put on a school play? |
All the middle schools Im aware of put on school plays - does yours not? |
It sounds like you want every school to be the same even though the student populations they serve are vastly different. Why do you think this is going to work? |
Barf |
As someone with a higher SES, who's daughter was accepted and attended one of these schools, I can say that our experiences is that the few kids bused (driven actually) to the magnet schools cannot make a difference in the environment of the school. They combine incoming 6th graders (who are often ahead academically) with 8th graders who are on level. The kids were mean and the school does not care. My daughter cried every day and only lasted one semester in the program before we pulled her. Bused in middle school kids will never be able to turn the tide on what has been developing for over a decade. Put that on someone else. |
| I think it would be great if they use the money they save on busing to offer the same level and variety of advanced programming at every school. In some schools this may mean offering some classes to small numbers of kids and not cancelling them due to low enrollment or due to the school just not feeling like it. |
Sorry for your child’s experience. Our experience was the opposite. Mine attended one of those schools as well. The students there were very different than those in the high SES environment we are used to. For example, it was surprising to learn most of the students taking part in the lunch program. We are from an environment where most parents shield their kids from the school lunch. What the kids are like is different too—almost like visiting a different country. My kid made many friends of all SES, and students were well behaved in and out of classrooms. The school did not combine 6th and 8th graders, so perhaps this helped. There were enough academically advanced kids in each grade to keep them within their grade and able to provide rigor in a handful of classes. Having the SES diversity seemed to have an uplifting effect as a whole for most in the school. |
Do you hear yourself? What a savior complex. |
+1 |
Troll be gone |
Our DCC MS does not and probably never will. Staff are barely willing to do a few weak afterschool fluff clubs like crochet club. |
I don’t know why it wouldn’t work. It would certainly be fair. There are smart and high performing students at all schools, or did you not know that? My kids attend a title I elementary school. The school sends roughly 10 kids to the CES housed at a higher income school, leaving behind kids who qualified but didn’t get a seat. Why should MCPS take away from the peer cohort at a lower income school to put these kids at a higher income school? And why should the kids who didn’t get a seat not have access to the same curriculum? If MCPS would just offer the curriculum at the local school, then everyone who qualified could have access to the program (fairness), which would also be good for the school community. Instead they take from one school and give to another. Similar machinations happen at the middle school level through the lottery programs. |
Starting at the elementary school level would be more beneficial than trying to bring different SES populations together at age 12. Growing up together in the same environment is important, but DCUM is against those type of boundary changes. It's so much more difficult to do starting in 6th grade. |
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Middle school is already a steaming pile of dog poo for most kids. Enrichment is the only way out for smart kids and in-school enrichment is nonexistent in most schools.
High school and elementary school were significantly better experiences for my kid, and they were with essentially the same group of kids the whole time -- some very bright and motivated, ELLs, kids receiving FARMs, some special ed, etc. |