I get what you are saying, but I think the Basis web site is pretty shitty. Its ugly and doesn't have a lot of content, but I hear great things about the school |
Fair enough. But I wouldn't put my kid at Basis either
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| The setting for my chair is low. I'm short. |
My point exactly. It sat on the Eliot Hine website just like that. Students probably feel the same way. |
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Not on the website. On their twitter feed. Same questions to be asked each day at school in the morning. Am trying to gather information about the school everywhere.
https://mobile.twitter.com/EliotHine/status/441240749376417793 |
Yes, but is Woodley Park much more expensive than AU Park (Janney), Spring Valley (Mann) or Palisades (Key)? Given its proximately to Adams Morgan and Mount Pleasant, I would expect Oyster to be more than 7% Black. |
No, it's not more expensive, let alone much more expensive. There are way more multi-family dwellings in WP. Even excluding those, I'm not sure there is much difference in average home price between, say, Spring Valley and Woodley Park. In fact, a quick review of Zillow sales records suggests that WP is cheaper than SV. |
Several years ago the city was more black, and both less white and less hispanic. The English-dominant (aka "white") portion of Oyster is now filled with neighborhood children from Woodley Park (predominately whiter and wealthier). In the meantime, the Spanish-dominant ("latino") population has skewed much more hispanic, because the school has been able to tighten those requirements. Adams Morgan (nearby catchment) used to be a lot more diverse both ethnically and economically, but the couple-no-kids population has definitely risen. There aren't as many Adams Morgan families with children to send to Oyster now. And Columbia Heights used to have a lot fewer recent immigrants from Central America. The fast-expanding latino population in DC is centered in CH. That makes it much more likely that true Spanish-speakers are taking those slots (which you can tell when you see the ethnic flip-flop from lower grades to upper grades). Having said that, DC in general is diversifying. Not everybody is going to view that as a good thing. |
Oyster is 61% Hispanic. It probably doesn't even account for the international diversity there, or among the other white and maybe even black kids. Why is diversity defined as sufficiently "African American?" |
Agree. Agree. Agree. We need to move beyond "Diversity=black" mentality. |
| I try to defend DCPS when I came but I have no earthly clue why it took them 6 months to update the school profiles. They did the school count day census thing back in October. In general I find it really embarrassing that DCPS with its behemoth of a central office also can't be bothered to set up up websites for each school and so it falls to the school prinicpal or PTA or teachers to manage that. Almost every other school in the DMV has individual school websites. |
I wonder which school you thought would be the whitest? |
+1 If you want to know what diversity looks like, look to the charters. Many charters have a far bigger mix of kids from different races, cultures, heritages and economic levels. |
I would have guessed Key, then Janney. I have lived in DC a long time and therefore know the little nuances of the stable ward 3 neighborhoods. The easternmost part of CCDC, near the "point" of the DC diamond (Hawthorne, barnaby woods) had always had a not-insignificant AA presence. The census "race as shown by dots" maps still show this. So it's weird that their kids are, evidently, not at Lafayette. Are they older than elementary? All in private schools? Do all those "AA dots" shown in Hawthorne and barnaby woods denote childless couples? A mystery. |
they do not give the stats for charter school at all, correct? |