+1 especially ruling class that don't aggressively support school choice; seems a bit hypocritical to not want for others what you so abundantly have yourself. |
Of course, DCUM is mainly hearsay. Interesting to me, very few of the schools mentioned are feeders to Deal. Except Eaton. Many of the schools are Cap Hill with folks likely in bounds for SH (Watkins), EH or Jefferson (Brent), and the 2 Rivers kids might likely be from those areas as well. Not surprising. Not statistically meaningful. But interesting to me. |
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DC Prep
Howard Roads Stokes Oyster-Adams |
| Potomac Lighthouse |
I hadn't considered that, PP. Perhaps Warren Buffet is wrong about the random assignment part. Public schools would probably improve faster if they have to compete for students and funding. Are the public schools in these countries independently operated or are they operated by the state. In other words, do charters play a role in improving public education in those countries? |
PP, BASIS does not have a waitlist because they were willing to take all interested families this year. At one of the information sessions Mary said that they would rather go back to the charter board and ask for more spots than resort to a lottery. I don't know if they ultimately had to do so, but I suspect that they did. |
I imagine that it will be a while before BASIS lures many kids away from Deal. |
around 50 from Harvard |
Amy Carter was not allowed outside for recess at Stevens. The secret service felt the playground was too close to the street. If the Obama girls attended a DCPS school (or charter for that matter), it would be a security nightmare. Public schools can't choose their students, they can't allow the secret service access to admissions decisions, there's nothing to stop a terrorist from moving in bounds just to get access to the school. In addition, few public schools in DC have the same kind of setbacks and other security features that Sidwell has. |
In most Asian countries, students have to test-in to selective schools (like Europe) and meet certain measures to attend. Makes the DCCAS look like a cake walk... |
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Janney
re: waitlist - originally expected 400 students, last I heard ~490 registered. |
DC CAS is a cakewalk. Sickening that so many schools and students still struggle with just the basics. |
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Obama's girls attended private schools in Chicago when he was not the president and presumably not under threat.
I don't give a damn where his spoiled girls go to school. I do mind when he forbids poorer families to attend Sidwell (or other private schools) by taking away the vouchers/fellowship program in place and has the gall to make it sound like this decision is for the well-being of all. |
| In this day and age, whatever your political leanings, DCPS is not a suitable option for any high profile person's child. Get a grip. We have enough issues in DCPS to deal with without adding secret service and security concerns into the mix. As for parent day traffic back-up, please... |
| Most of the DCPS schools are not a suitable option for anyone who's looking to have their child get ahead. It used to be that public schools had a variety of offerings, from academic tracks, where things like 7th/8th grade Algebra would not be an issue, to vocational/technical schools where if a kid wasn't into academia, he could at least still get valuable skills for the workplace, and so on. Nowadays, it seems like most of those things aren't even a viable option, yet alone be solidly available. Many coming out of the DCPS system haven't even mastered the basics like reading, writing and basic math. It's all been watered down to the point of not being much more than a glorified daycare, and kids are emerging not ready for much of anything. |