No, but only ~40% proficient on the DC CAS, and being a "Priority" school is. |
Thanks for being the reason we have changed the privacy setting on our facebook page. You are clearly not a member of our group or you would have had the courage to ask your "questions" in the group. What you think you know isn't the truth and what you have said is tantamount to slander. So if you are in our group, I dare you to say something, you insipid little cockroach. |
| What, in particular is slanderous about the post? The fact that he was head of a school that 'lost' 47,000? Or the fact that he is returning, once again- to mismanage things? |
Can you clarify what is actually going on for those of us who aren't in the know? |
| Stealing money earmarked for children in order to fund a gospel convert? THAT would be the work of an insipid cockroach. |
That's not an insipid cockroach, it's a venal and unscrupulous one. |
Of course DCPS has the IMPACT evaluation system now, so all bad teachers are impacted out in one or two years. Can't blame bad teachers anymore -- must be something else -- bad administrators maybe |
Also, Hendersonassures us that good teachers are lined up trying to get into DCPS where the pay is higher and opportunities for even higher pay are great, what with the opportunity to be "Highly effective." |
Sounds like nothing has changed. |
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Oh, sweet Jesus, can we please close this awful school? Is there anything other than misplaced pride (largely on the part of DCPS) keeping it open? The school spirit of retired folks doesn't justify under-educating the students who are stuck there today.
This school is a path to failure. Why are tax-payers subsidizing it? |
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+100
The only legitimate reason to keep it open is to appease a diminishing voter block of people who spout "Colt Pride" but have nothing broader to offer the situation. The school was once great pre-1980s, then descended to passable through the mid-nineties. Since then it has not been anything other than significantly sub-standard. Schools like this are a very big part of why the DC school system is so dysfunctional. The school has been systematically overlooked for decades now. Maybe the problems have more to them than appeasing voters who are nostalgic with school pride. We have an entire feeder system of schools that makes it possible for someone to get a diploma when a person is barely literate. Less than a handful of the kids I knew who graduated from there a decade ago who did make it to college were actually able to graduate. How can there be so many years of efforts put into elementary schools with zero progress on having more than one or two upper level schools that are functioning and producing educated adults? I understand that the resources are limited, but there has got to be some way to deal with this. Unfortunately, I think the problem is so deep and covered in so many layer of issues that the best solution is to dismantle the decades-old culture of the school, mothball the school and offer it up to a charter. |
Hey, don't run from this. What did PP say that was "slanderous"? Did the money go missing or not? According to the article posted, Mr. Jackson may not have stolen it, but he for damn sure was responsible for it and had a major hand in its mismanagement. If either of these is true, no way should he be anywhere near a functioning school. |
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He did spend AOL grant money to fund a Gospel concert. That point is not in dispute. He and the bank manager were the only people in the school who were authorized to cut checks. They are the only ones who had access to the money.
Factual information, by definition, is not slanderous. |
He isn't anywhere near a functioning school. It's Coolidge. |
Touché |