Maury Capitol Hill

Anonymous
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Anonymous wrote:Why is it a bigger problem to have adjacent school boundaries with a big discrepancy, while the cluster of upper NW schools are safely ensconced among other affluent schools?


Oh, the people behind this proposal would love to get rid of IB schools and school choice altogether and bus kids to perfectly “equitable” schools. (Except this is DC so on top of that, there would not actually be buses.) Maury/Miner is a test case for them or at least one set of schools they think they have the power to overwhelm.

https://ggwash.org/view/86493/how-school-boundaries-and-feeder-patterns-shape-dcs-housing-and-education-inequalities


The process is being managed by the Deputy Mayor for Education's office, along with the Master Facility Plan. https://dme.dc.gov/boundaries2023 . There are some consultants helping with parts of the process.

Nowhere in any of the meetings or materials has it been suggested that kids get sent across the city. Every presentation they share the same first few slides about the goals of the process, one of which is to have a strong system of by right schools (https://dme.dc.gov/sites/default/files/dc/sites/dme/publication/attachments/Boundary%20Study%20Townhall%202_FINAL.pdf) If anything, in addition to the boundary conversations, there has been conversation about programmatic opportunities at schools across the city so kids presumably would not need to travel as far to access various programs.

Housing segregation is a real issue in DC, and in my opinion, a reason they aren't addressing the cluster of schools in upper NW in the same way could be because right now the affordable housing options don't exist in that part of the city that would allow for a significant increase of socioeconomic diversity, and nobody wants the solution to be bussing kids across town.


You should read the link. Getting rid of IB schools may not be the expressed goal but it’s very much a policy proposal that a lot of education advocates embrace. Why else do you think they would be floating it on a small scale for Maury/Miner?
Anonymous
Just a logistical question: did they say how the grades would be split up and which school would house which in the meeting? Seems like this is essential information they should communicate if they're going to present their recommendations early next year. . .

Really don't think this will actually achieve the goals they claim they are pursuing. Plus the disruption of adding an extra transition in early years is not something we'd sign our kid up for.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Why is it a bigger problem to have adjacent school boundaries with a big discrepancy, while the cluster of upper NW schools are safely ensconced among other affluent schools?


Part of our problem on the Hill is that we are represented by Koolaid drinking Charles Allen who will do jack sh*t to prevent stupid things like this proposal from becoming a reality.
Anonymous
I think people are way too focused on the racial demographics in explaining people’s opposition and not the test scores. Miner’s test scores are *awful.* 50% of kids score a 1 on ELA. That means they are almost completely illiterate. Taking Maury’s upper grade classes and filling them 33-40% with kids who are illiterate would destroy the school overnight. Anyone who thinks otherwise is completely naive or has never had kids in grades 2+ at a DCPS.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Well, based on that meeting it seems like the community is decidedly against the proposal. Hopefully that puts it to rest.


As someone who will be impacted by this, but literally just found out tonight, I’d love to read a rundown of the meeting.
Anonymous
I’d be interested in others’ takes on the meeting, but here’s a TLDR of how it felt.

DME: This is a listening session to get your feedback on possible changes to address challenges.
Parents: Ok, so what are the possible changes?
DME: We want to cluster you with Miner.
Parents: I don’t think we like that.
DME: We would encourage you to think about it differently.
Parents: Ok. What are the challenges this is supposed to address?
DME: Socioeconomic disparities between neighboring schools.
Parents: Are we the only school with this challenge?
DME: Goodness, no, you’re not even close to the worst one. You’re just the only one we are considering clustering.
Parents: Can you reconsider?
DME: We hear you. But no.
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Anonymous wrote:Doesn't the Peabody/Watkins cluster actually prove that pairing the schools is not a viable solution to the identified problem? I can't find socioeconomic data, but looking at the racial demographic data on My School DC, Peabody's demographics are very similar to Maury's, and very different from Watkins'. And I believe Peabody and Watkins started closer together than Maury and Miner would.

Maybe they're hoping that people will be okay with Miner for pre-K and the Maury name will keep people in for the upper grades. But again, my understanding of when the cluster began is that Watkins was considered a pretty desirable school.


The Peabody/Watkins cluster historically had many, many issues that caused all kinds of problems (many based on historical racism), and so it's hard to extrapolate a lot from that particular cluster because of that. I'd say the most relevant problem today is the lack of bus transportation between the 2 buildings. When there were buses, many families did actually go through Peabody and then through Watkins; I know because I was one of those families. Many did peel off, but again, that was largely due to all the other problems that already existed within the Cluster for decades.


The need for busses is caused by the cluster!!! It is moronic to argue that the cluster is not a failed experiment and instead pin the blame on an externality caused by the cluster. You must work for DCPS.


Part of the reason people felt like they need those buses was because the schools in the cluster school are significantly further apart and the boundary is very long and skinny. If this Maury Miner cluster happened, those schools are only three blocks apart so parents could easily drop kids off at both locations during the 8: 15 to 845 drop off window. Also parking by Peabody to do drop off his horrible which also was an incentive for the bus,


I don't know what the Miner schedule is, but drop off at Maury is between 8:30 and 8:40 for kids not eating breakfast. And the three blocks translates to an extra 20 minutes (conservatively) for me, which would be another 40 minutes a day. I get that it's closer than Peabody/Watkins (and it is absolutely outrageous that DCPS doesn't offer transportation there), but it would be a pretty huge inconvenience nevertheless.


Interesting, can kids not play on the playground if they are not eating breakfast? I do imagine that if this actually happened they would make drop off schedules that would accommodate both schools/parents.


LOL nope.


NP. Why nope? It seems like there would be lots of ways to do drop off and pick up to accommodate parents at both schools, given their proximity. Especially because of the age split between campuses. A staggered drop off schedule with greater flexibility for the upper school campus, where you can have higher child to teacher ratios (and thus have a larger group of kids on the playground or in the cafeteria with fewer minders until school starts). Also for families that live nearby, by 4th grade your kids can be walking on their own.

As for the time, I personally wouldn't mind that extra walk, but lots of families get cargo bikes for this reason. I know a bunch of families with kids in daycare and and elementary schools that are a lot further apart than Maury and Miner, do it by cargo bike, and can throw in a couple errands and still make their commute to work or make it back home in a reasonable length of time.

I don't know if the cluster makes sense or not -- I would have to think more critically about whether combining those two school populations would really result in a "rising tide lifts all boats" situation, or just result in shedding UMC families altogether in a way that undermines Maury's success. I am not sure, though I understand why they are looking for ways to help the school population at Miner, because it has a very decent ECE program but dismal test scores in 3-5, and clearly loses most of its high-resource kids by 2nd or 3rd, which makes it a lot harder because when every kid is high-risk, no one gets what they need.

But the idea that the main objection is drop-off logistics seems silly on its face. Maury students spent two years in a swing space while the school was renovated, and that posed drop-off issues too. But the renovations was of course worth it and was well worth those adjustments. If a cluster could be beneficial in the long run, adjusting start times or having a slightly less convenient school commute for a few years just seems like such a minor complaint to me.


Let me guess— you still have kids in strollers, right? If you think Maury parents are going to feel safe letting their 4th grader walk to Miner, you need to understand your neighborhood better.


Nope, two elementary age kids.

The proposal is, I think, for Miner to be the ECE center because ECE at Miner is already pretty decent (and a not insignificant number of Maury parents send their kids there for PK3 and/or PK4 because there are not enough IB spots for the demand at Maury). So no 4th grader would walk to Miner. The idea is that if you are currently IB for Maury, your older elementary kids could walk to Maury (or you could drop them off early since it's the closer school) and you could walk the 3 blocks to Miner for ECE drop off of younger kids.

Also, given that these schools are 3 block apart, the argument that the neighborhood around Miner is simply too dangerous to send kids to school there makes no sense. If there is a shooting 2 blocks from Miner, then there was a shooting (at most) 5 blocks from Maury. These schools are very close to each other.

I wish y'all would just admit: you like that your kids got to school with UMC, mostly white kids, and you don't want your kids to go to school with poor black kids. Because you and I both know that's the issue.


Miner is a much more dangerous location than most parts of the Maury zone. This is just a fact. It is basically right on the Starburst which is one of the most dangerous and zombified corners of the entire city.

Maury parents already send their kids to school with “poor black kids.” Thanks for playing the inevitable race card, which is exactly what the nameless DC bureaucrat who thought this up intended. “Hmm, what can I do to deflect from the fact that DCPS is failing poor black kids? I know - create a fake race controversy and mess up two schools, then blame it all on white parents!”


Kids don't go to school in "most parts of the Maury zone." They go to Maury. Which is 3 blocks from Miner. That is the relevant issue -- how close together are these schools, does it make sense to cluster them.

Many Maury parents send their kids to Miner for PK already, because it's so hard to get into Maury PK without sibling AND boundary preference. It's very common. So it's established that parents in the Maury zone are fine sending their kids to Miner, and are fine with the PK classes there. If Miner is already the default ECE backup for Maury kids, why not formalize that? It would solve the problem of insufficient PK spots for Maury parents while also allowing Miner to focus on the thing they already do pretty well. With the 0-3s center being built as well, Miner essentially becomes an early childhood center that can focus on the specific needs of younger children, can focus outdoor areas and school programming around that group.

For upper grades, nothing would change for Maury parents EXCEPT the addition of kids currently IB for Miner, who currently skew poorer and less white than those now at Maury. Everything else stays the same -- facility, teachers, admin. The only difference is using the capacity gained from moving PK3-K or PK3-1 to Miner to expand upper grades to include kids living in the Miner boundary.

This is what people who are upset about this proposal are actually upset about. It's not the distance between the schools -- they are very close and may parents already send kids to Miner for PK. It's not neighborhood crime, these schools are in the same neighborhood. It's the composition of the classes and discomfort with a poorer, blacker school population.


Is this true? I chose to pay for daycare over sending my kid into Miner, and I don't know anyone my kid's class that sent their kids to Miner. I would guess that of course some parents choose this route, but "many"?


21 to AppleTree and 13 to Miner in 2021-22, if I'm reading the data correctly. (Agree this is not "many" in a meaningful sense.)


13 is "many" to me. That's almost a full PK class. Is that 21 just for Apple Tree Lincoln Park or does it include the Oklahoma Ave. campus? Either way, what that says to me is that not only does Maury not have enough PK seats for IB families, but even a PK-only charter that is very close to Maury doesn't have enough capacity to absorb all the excess.

Maury parents have complained for years about the problem of PK access.

I also think it's interesting that some on this thread are convinced that combining the schools would immediately "infect" Maury with Miner's issues with administration. Why? To me the problems Miner has had getting competent administrators is a point in favor of combining the schools. Maury is a well-run school with a good administration and a great PTO. Usually when you have an example of a terrific school in a district, you want to export what is working to other schools. So why not export what works at Maury to Miner? Why does this automatically mean Maury will suffer and not that Miner will benefit?

Is Maury a strong school because of the effort of teachers, administrators, and community, or is it a strong school because of demographics? It's just not clear to me why this is automatically a bad idea. I get the objections about commute, but to me that is not a compelling reason to throw out the proposal altogether, especially when these schools are already quite close together and already a decent number of Maury families use Miner for ECE.


You sound incredibly naive. Schools are not businesses to merge. If Miner needs better administration, it is beyond irresponsible for DCPS to decide, “hey, how about we just combine it with a school with good administration?” instead of, you know, taking responsibility for the Miner administration directly. I can’t believe I’m going to use this word, but it is almost a kind of belief in colonization of the “poor” school by the enlightened “rich” school.


This is an interesting discussion, and one could argue it be viewed from the opposite perspective as well. Families who choose to enroll in a DCPS school do so knowing the school is part of a bigger school system. Each school does not exist in a vacuum. Decisions about many aspects of the school are made at a citywide level, and as you can see on the Miner thread, leadership shifts between schools when necessary. In this situation, not only is the school part of the same system, but it exists a few blocks away, and feeds into the same middle school. When you are part of a bigger organization or system, sometimes decisions may be made that impact more than one piece/school - and in this situation, clustering the schools may make sense for multiple reasons that have been listed already in this thread, not just the administration piece.


Nobody has given a reason, other than some Pollyannish and frankly somewhat offensive belief that Miner can only improve if combined with Maury.


Some of you need to take a step back and consider how you are approaching opposition to this proposal. I say this as someone who is outside the Maury and Miner boundaries but very familiar with DCPS and with the factors that led to this proposal.

Whining about commuting between campuses, dismissing the existing issue of PK capacity for IB families at Miner, complaining about crime around Miner (even though Miner is incredibly close to Maury so much of that crime is ALSO near Maury) -- none of this is compelling and really does come off as rich white parents getting mad about the idea of their kids going to school with more poor black kids. I'm not saying that's what it is -- I get the commute issues and why that would be irritating, and I understand the difference between Miner's location and Maury's in terms of crime. But I'm just telling you how it sounds to an outsiders ear.

If you want to oppose this cluster, I think you need to back up and focus on two things. (1) are the logical reasons put forth for the cluster sound? and (2) is the cluster achievable from a logistical standpoint.

Regarding #1, I would be asking whether looking at current school demographics makes sense for making predictions for what a combined cluster would look like demographically. Miner gets a large percentage of students from OOB, in part because UMC families in it's boundary (which there are a decent number of due to gentrification in Kingman Park) don't feel good about the school. If suddenly they're part of a Miner-Maury cluster, more might choose IB, which would actually push out many of the black and low SES students the school now serves.

On the other hand, if combining the schools causes UMC families in both boundaries to look at charters, privates, or move, then you don't get the rising tide the DME is suggesting might come from combining the schools.

I would also raise questions about logistics. Do not focus on drop-off times -- that's an easy fix that is easy dismiss because you can just stagger drop offs or enable parents to drop off older kids on the playground early. Instead, look at facilities. Do they make sense for a cluster? What about aspects of Maury's renovation that were specifically designed for ECE -- if the cluster happens, all of that will need to be retrofitted for upper grades and its wasted investment. Meanwhile, Miner would need a major overhaul to make it work as an ECE-focused campus. It got a new K-5 playground geared toward older kids just 4 years ago, for instance. Does it have enough classrooms with sinks and bathrooms to accommodate the ECE populations at both schools? How much would it cost to make that happen?

If ya'll come in complaining about how the change would add 20 minutes to your personal commute or pointing fingers at Miner's administrative problems as evidence that Miner is a "bad" school that you don't want to send your kids to, I hope you realize that you will wind up looking like whiny, privileged, mostly white parents who just don't want poor black kids at your school. Instead, make a reasoned argument as to why this proposal is unlikely to accomplish its intended goals, and point out the financial, structural, and logistical barriers to making it happen. Stay calm and reasonable. It's not a great proposal but it's not ENTIRELY without merit -- acknowledge the issues of inequity between schools but then calmly state why a cluster is unlikely to address that inequity. By all means, point out how the CH cluster has failed to meaningfully improve equity in it's boundary and how the cluster approach has in some ways divided the boundary even more aggressively along racial and SES lines.


So there actually is no good reason to do it other than some absolutely unsubstantiated notion of “equity.” I note that you not only are not part of the community but you also have your facts wrong about crime etc. And miss me with the racial shaming. There’s zero evidence this will help Miner, or that Miner families actually want this, and it seems to be *entirely* based on the offensive notion that the mere addition of white kids “improves” a school. What in the world?

I’ll say it again - if the DME thinks Miner needs more support then *give Miner more support.* Directly. The notion that an injection of whiteness is the only way Miner can be “improved” by DCPS is bizarre and wrong on so many levels.


I'm trying to HELP you. When you act like equity is stupid and pointless, you shoot yourself in the foot.

The point is that the cluster is unlikely to accomplish its equity goals and likely to create additional problems that undermine an existing, successful neighborhood school.

So take the proposal seriously and challenge it on the merits. Stomping your feet, pointing at NW schools, and rolling your eyes at the idea of equity just makes it seem like you are mad about the prospect of sending your kids to school with poor black kids (complaining that kids at Miner are "functionally illiterate" and then acting like if they go to school with your kids, their illiteracy will be contagious doesn't help either).

Consider that the goal of this proposal is to help a struggling school and that the kids at that school deserve better. And then explain why the cluster will not get them that. Try sounding like you give a damn that families at Miner are being poorly served right now.
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Anonymous wrote:Doesn't the Peabody/Watkins cluster actually prove that pairing the schools is not a viable solution to the identified problem? I can't find socioeconomic data, but looking at the racial demographic data on My School DC, Peabody's demographics are very similar to Maury's, and very different from Watkins'. And I believe Peabody and Watkins started closer together than Maury and Miner would.

Maybe they're hoping that people will be okay with Miner for pre-K and the Maury name will keep people in for the upper grades. But again, my understanding of when the cluster began is that Watkins was considered a pretty desirable school.


The Peabody/Watkins cluster historically had many, many issues that caused all kinds of problems (many based on historical racism), and so it's hard to extrapolate a lot from that particular cluster because of that. I'd say the most relevant problem today is the lack of bus transportation between the 2 buildings. When there were buses, many families did actually go through Peabody and then through Watkins; I know because I was one of those families. Many did peel off, but again, that was largely due to all the other problems that already existed within the Cluster for decades.


The need for busses is caused by the cluster!!! It is moronic to argue that the cluster is not a failed experiment and instead pin the blame on an externality caused by the cluster. You must work for DCPS.


Part of the reason people felt like they need those buses was because the schools in the cluster school are significantly further apart and the boundary is very long and skinny. If this Maury Miner cluster happened, those schools are only three blocks apart so parents could easily drop kids off at both locations during the 8: 15 to 845 drop off window. Also parking by Peabody to do drop off his horrible which also was an incentive for the bus,


I don't know what the Miner schedule is, but drop off at Maury is between 8:30 and 8:40 for kids not eating breakfast. And the three blocks translates to an extra 20 minutes (conservatively) for me, which would be another 40 minutes a day. I get that it's closer than Peabody/Watkins (and it is absolutely outrageous that DCPS doesn't offer transportation there), but it would be a pretty huge inconvenience nevertheless.


Interesting, can kids not play on the playground if they are not eating breakfast? I do imagine that if this actually happened they would make drop off schedules that would accommodate both schools/parents.


LOL nope.


NP. Why nope? It seems like there would be lots of ways to do drop off and pick up to accommodate parents at both schools, given their proximity. Especially because of the age split between campuses. A staggered drop off schedule with greater flexibility for the upper school campus, where you can have higher child to teacher ratios (and thus have a larger group of kids on the playground or in the cafeteria with fewer minders until school starts). Also for families that live nearby, by 4th grade your kids can be walking on their own.

As for the time, I personally wouldn't mind that extra walk, but lots of families get cargo bikes for this reason. I know a bunch of families with kids in daycare and and elementary schools that are a lot further apart than Maury and Miner, do it by cargo bike, and can throw in a couple errands and still make their commute to work or make it back home in a reasonable length of time.

I don't know if the cluster makes sense or not -- I would have to think more critically about whether combining those two school populations would really result in a "rising tide lifts all boats" situation, or just result in shedding UMC families altogether in a way that undermines Maury's success. I am not sure, though I understand why they are looking for ways to help the school population at Miner, because it has a very decent ECE program but dismal test scores in 3-5, and clearly loses most of its high-resource kids by 2nd or 3rd, which makes it a lot harder because when every kid is high-risk, no one gets what they need.

But the idea that the main objection is drop-off logistics seems silly on its face. Maury students spent two years in a swing space while the school was renovated, and that posed drop-off issues too. But the renovations was of course worth it and was well worth those adjustments. If a cluster could be beneficial in the long run, adjusting start times or having a slightly less convenient school commute for a few years just seems like such a minor complaint to me.


Let me guess— you still have kids in strollers, right? If you think Maury parents are going to feel safe letting their 4th grader walk to Miner, you need to understand your neighborhood better.


Nope, two elementary age kids.

The proposal is, I think, for Miner to be the ECE center because ECE at Miner is already pretty decent (and a not insignificant number of Maury parents send their kids there for PK3 and/or PK4 because there are not enough IB spots for the demand at Maury). So no 4th grader would walk to Miner. The idea is that if you are currently IB for Maury, your older elementary kids could walk to Maury (or you could drop them off early since it's the closer school) and you could walk the 3 blocks to Miner for ECE drop off of younger kids.

Also, given that these schools are 3 block apart, the argument that the neighborhood around Miner is simply too dangerous to send kids to school there makes no sense. If there is a shooting 2 blocks from Miner, then there was a shooting (at most) 5 blocks from Maury. These schools are very close to each other.

I wish y'all would just admit: you like that your kids got to school with UMC, mostly white kids, and you don't want your kids to go to school with poor black kids. Because you and I both know that's the issue.


Miner is a much more dangerous location than most parts of the Maury zone. This is just a fact. It is basically right on the Starburst which is one of the most dangerous and zombified corners of the entire city.

Maury parents already send their kids to school with “poor black kids.” Thanks for playing the inevitable race card, which is exactly what the nameless DC bureaucrat who thought this up intended. “Hmm, what can I do to deflect from the fact that DCPS is failing poor black kids? I know - create a fake race controversy and mess up two schools, then blame it all on white parents!”


Kids don't go to school in "most parts of the Maury zone." They go to Maury. Which is 3 blocks from Miner. That is the relevant issue -- how close together are these schools, does it make sense to cluster them.

Many Maury parents send their kids to Miner for PK already, because it's so hard to get into Maury PK without sibling AND boundary preference. It's very common. So it's established that parents in the Maury zone are fine sending their kids to Miner, and are fine with the PK classes there. If Miner is already the default ECE backup for Maury kids, why not formalize that? It would solve the problem of insufficient PK spots for Maury parents while also allowing Miner to focus on the thing they already do pretty well. With the 0-3s center being built as well, Miner essentially becomes an early childhood center that can focus on the specific needs of younger children, can focus outdoor areas and school programming around that group.

For upper grades, nothing would change for Maury parents EXCEPT the addition of kids currently IB for Miner, who currently skew poorer and less white than those now at Maury. Everything else stays the same -- facility, teachers, admin. The only difference is using the capacity gained from moving PK3-K or PK3-1 to Miner to expand upper grades to include kids living in the Miner boundary.

This is what people who are upset about this proposal are actually upset about. It's not the distance between the schools -- they are very close and may parents already send kids to Miner for PK. It's not neighborhood crime, these schools are in the same neighborhood. It's the composition of the classes and discomfort with a poorer, blacker school population.


Is this true? I chose to pay for daycare over sending my kid into Miner, and I don't know anyone my kid's class that sent their kids to Miner. I would guess that of course some parents choose this route, but "many"?


21 to AppleTree and 13 to Miner in 2021-22, if I'm reading the data correctly. (Agree this is not "many" in a meaningful sense.)


13 is "many" to me. That's almost a full PK class. Is that 21 just for Apple Tree Lincoln Park or does it include the Oklahoma Ave. campus? Either way, what that says to me is that not only does Maury not have enough PK seats for IB families, but even a PK-only charter that is very close to Maury doesn't have enough capacity to absorb all the excess.

Maury parents have complained for years about the problem of PK access.

I also think it's interesting that some on this thread are convinced that combining the schools would immediately "infect" Maury with Miner's issues with administration. Why? To me the problems Miner has had getting competent administrators is a point in favor of combining the schools. Maury is a well-run school with a good administration and a great PTO. Usually when you have an example of a terrific school in a district, you want to export what is working to other schools. So why not export what works at Maury to Miner? Why does this automatically mean Maury will suffer and not that Miner will benefit?

Is Maury a strong school because of the effort of teachers, administrators, and community, or is it a strong school because of demographics? It's just not clear to me why this is automatically a bad idea. I get the objections about commute, but to me that is not a compelling reason to throw out the proposal altogether, especially when these schools are already quite close together and already a decent number of Maury families use Miner for ECE.


You sound incredibly naive. Schools are not businesses to merge. If Miner needs better administration, it is beyond irresponsible for DCPS to decide, “hey, how about we just combine it with a school with good administration?” instead of, you know, taking responsibility for the Miner administration directly. I can’t believe I’m going to use this word, but it is almost a kind of belief in colonization of the “poor” school by the enlightened “rich” school.


This is an interesting discussion, and one could argue it be viewed from the opposite perspective as well. Families who choose to enroll in a DCPS school do so knowing the school is part of a bigger school system. Each school does not exist in a vacuum. Decisions about many aspects of the school are made at a citywide level, and as you can see on the Miner thread, leadership shifts between schools when necessary. In this situation, not only is the school part of the same system, but it exists a few blocks away, and feeds into the same middle school. When you are part of a bigger organization or system, sometimes decisions may be made that impact more than one piece/school - and in this situation, clustering the schools may make sense for multiple reasons that have been listed already in this thread, not just the administration piece.


Nobody has given a reason, other than some Pollyannish and frankly somewhat offensive belief that Miner can only improve if combined with Maury.


Some of you need to take a step back and consider how you are approaching opposition to this proposal. I say this as someone who is outside the Maury and Miner boundaries but very familiar with DCPS and with the factors that led to this proposal.

Whining about commuting between campuses, dismissing the existing issue of PK capacity for IB families at Miner, complaining about crime around Miner (even though Miner is incredibly close to Maury so much of that crime is ALSO near Maury) -- none of this is compelling and really does come off as rich white parents getting mad about the idea of their kids going to school with more poor black kids. I'm not saying that's what it is -- I get the commute issues and why that would be irritating, and I understand the difference between Miner's location and Maury's in terms of crime. But I'm just telling you how it sounds to an outsiders ear.

If you want to oppose this cluster, I think you need to back up and focus on two things. (1) are the logical reasons put forth for the cluster sound? and (2) is the cluster achievable from a logistical standpoint.

Regarding #1, I would be asking whether looking at current school demographics makes sense for making predictions for what a combined cluster would look like demographically. Miner gets a large percentage of students from OOB, in part because UMC families in it's boundary (which there are a decent number of due to gentrification in Kingman Park) don't feel good about the school. If suddenly they're part of a Miner-Maury cluster, more might choose IB, which would actually push out many of the black and low SES students the school now serves.

On the other hand, if combining the schools causes UMC families in both boundaries to look at charters, privates, or move, then you don't get the rising tide the DME is suggesting might come from combining the schools.

I would also raise questions about logistics. Do not focus on drop-off times -- that's an easy fix that is easy dismiss because you can just stagger drop offs or enable parents to drop off older kids on the playground early. Instead, look at facilities. Do they make sense for a cluster? What about aspects of Maury's renovation that were specifically designed for ECE -- if the cluster happens, all of that will need to be retrofitted for upper grades and its wasted investment. Meanwhile, Miner would need a major overhaul to make it work as an ECE-focused campus. It got a new K-5 playground geared toward older kids just 4 years ago, for instance. Does it have enough classrooms with sinks and bathrooms to accommodate the ECE populations at both schools? How much would it cost to make that happen?

If ya'll come in complaining about how the change would add 20 minutes to your personal commute or pointing fingers at Miner's administrative problems as evidence that Miner is a "bad" school that you don't want to send your kids to, I hope you realize that you will wind up looking like whiny, privileged, mostly white parents who just don't want poor black kids at your school. Instead, make a reasoned argument as to why this proposal is unlikely to accomplish its intended goals, and point out the financial, structural, and logistical barriers to making it happen. Stay calm and reasonable. It's not a great proposal but it's not ENTIRELY without merit -- acknowledge the issues of inequity between schools but then calmly state why a cluster is unlikely to address that inequity. By all means, point out how the CH cluster has failed to meaningfully improve equity in it's boundary and how the cluster approach has in some ways divided the boundary even more aggressively along racial and SES lines.


So there actually is no good reason to do it other than some absolutely unsubstantiated notion of “equity.” I note that you not only are not part of the community but you also have your facts wrong about crime etc. And miss me with the racial shaming. There’s zero evidence this will help Miner, or that Miner families actually want this, and it seems to be *entirely* based on the offensive notion that the mere addition of white kids “improves” a school. What in the world?

I’ll say it again - if the DME thinks Miner needs more support then *give Miner more support.* Directly. The notion that an injection of whiteness is the only way Miner can be “improved” by DCPS is bizarre and wrong on so many levels.


I'm trying to HELP you. When you act like equity is stupid and pointless, you shoot yourself in the foot.

The point is that the cluster is unlikely to accomplish its equity goals and likely to create additional problems that undermine an existing, successful neighborhood school.

So take the proposal seriously and challenge it on the merits. Stomping your feet, pointing at NW schools, and rolling your eyes at the idea of equity just makes it seem like you are mad about the prospect of sending your kids to school with poor black kids (complaining that kids at Miner are "functionally illiterate" and then acting like if they go to school with your kids, their illiteracy will be contagious doesn't help either).

Consider that the goal of this proposal is to help a struggling school and that the kids at that school deserve better. And then explain why the cluster will not get them that. Try sounding like you give a damn that families at Miner are being poorly served right now.


You clearly didn’t attend the virtual meeting last night. The Maury parents’ questions and comments were exactly along the lines you suggest—how will the cluster solve the problem identified by DME, and is there any evidence that it will? And DME had essentially no answers to that. No one at the meeting rolled their eyes at equity, stomped their feet, or talked about NW schools.
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Anonymous wrote:I think people are way too focused on the racial demographics in explaining people’s opposition and not the test scores. Miner’s test scores are *awful.* 50% of kids score a 1 on ELA. That means they are almost completely illiterate. Taking Maury’s upper grade classes and filling them 33-40% with kids who are illiterate would destroy the school overnight. Anyone who thinks otherwise is completely naive or has never had kids in grades 2+ at a DCPS.


I think the word “destroy” is a bit hyperbolic, but yes, without tracking, this means that the classes will be taught to the median which will become much lower. And there will also be behavioral issues from kids with trauma backgrounds that without a trained staff are hard to deal with. If Miner lost Title 1 it would be a complete disaster. Let’s see DME propose intensive reading support at all grade levels instead. Schools should not have to chose between reading interventionists and other staff in their budgets.
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Anonymous wrote:I’d be interested in others’ takes on the meeting, but here’s a TLDR of how it felt.

DME: This is a listening session to get your feedback on possible changes to address challenges.
Parents: Ok, so what are the possible changes?
DME: We want to cluster you with Miner.
Parents: I don’t think we like that.
DME: We would encourage you to think about it differently.
Parents: Ok. What are the challenges this is supposed to address?
DME: Socioeconomic disparities between neighboring schools.
Parents: Are we the only school with this challenge?
DME: Goodness, no, you’re not even close to the worst one. You’re just the only one we are considering clustering.
Parents: Can you reconsider?
DME: We hear you. But no.


they clearly have targeted Maury as a pilot for this.
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Anonymous wrote:Doesn't the Peabody/Watkins cluster actually prove that pairing the schools is not a viable solution to the identified problem? I can't find socioeconomic data, but looking at the racial demographic data on My School DC, Peabody's demographics are very similar to Maury's, and very different from Watkins'. And I believe Peabody and Watkins started closer together than Maury and Miner would.

Maybe they're hoping that people will be okay with Miner for pre-K and the Maury name will keep people in for the upper grades. But again, my understanding of when the cluster began is that Watkins was considered a pretty desirable school.


The Peabody/Watkins cluster historically had many, many issues that caused all kinds of problems (many based on historical racism), and so it's hard to extrapolate a lot from that particular cluster because of that. I'd say the most relevant problem today is the lack of bus transportation between the 2 buildings. When there were buses, many families did actually go through Peabody and then through Watkins; I know because I was one of those families. Many did peel off, but again, that was largely due to all the other problems that already existed within the Cluster for decades.


The need for busses is caused by the cluster!!! It is moronic to argue that the cluster is not a failed experiment and instead pin the blame on an externality caused by the cluster. You must work for DCPS.


Part of the reason people felt like they need those buses was because the schools in the cluster school are significantly further apart and the boundary is very long and skinny. If this Maury Miner cluster happened, those schools are only three blocks apart so parents could easily drop kids off at both locations during the 8: 15 to 845 drop off window. Also parking by Peabody to do drop off his horrible which also was an incentive for the bus,


I don't know what the Miner schedule is, but drop off at Maury is between 8:30 and 8:40 for kids not eating breakfast. And the three blocks translates to an extra 20 minutes (conservatively) for me, which would be another 40 minutes a day. I get that it's closer than Peabody/Watkins (and it is absolutely outrageous that DCPS doesn't offer transportation there), but it would be a pretty huge inconvenience nevertheless.


Interesting, can kids not play on the playground if they are not eating breakfast? I do imagine that if this actually happened they would make drop off schedules that would accommodate both schools/parents.


LOL nope.


NP. Why nope? It seems like there would be lots of ways to do drop off and pick up to accommodate parents at both schools, given their proximity. Especially because of the age split between campuses. A staggered drop off schedule with greater flexibility for the upper school campus, where you can have higher child to teacher ratios (and thus have a larger group of kids on the playground or in the cafeteria with fewer minders until school starts). Also for families that live nearby, by 4th grade your kids can be walking on their own.

As for the time, I personally wouldn't mind that extra walk, but lots of families get cargo bikes for this reason. I know a bunch of families with kids in daycare and and elementary schools that are a lot further apart than Maury and Miner, do it by cargo bike, and can throw in a couple errands and still make their commute to work or make it back home in a reasonable length of time.

I don't know if the cluster makes sense or not -- I would have to think more critically about whether combining those two school populations would really result in a "rising tide lifts all boats" situation, or just result in shedding UMC families altogether in a way that undermines Maury's success. I am not sure, though I understand why they are looking for ways to help the school population at Miner, because it has a very decent ECE program but dismal test scores in 3-5, and clearly loses most of its high-resource kids by 2nd or 3rd, which makes it a lot harder because when every kid is high-risk, no one gets what they need.

But the idea that the main objection is drop-off logistics seems silly on its face. Maury students spent two years in a swing space while the school was renovated, and that posed drop-off issues too. But the renovations was of course worth it and was well worth those adjustments. If a cluster could be beneficial in the long run, adjusting start times or having a slightly less convenient school commute for a few years just seems like such a minor complaint to me.


Let me guess— you still have kids in strollers, right? If you think Maury parents are going to feel safe letting their 4th grader walk to Miner, you need to understand your neighborhood better.


Nope, two elementary age kids.

The proposal is, I think, for Miner to be the ECE center because ECE at Miner is already pretty decent (and a not insignificant number of Maury parents send their kids there for PK3 and/or PK4 because there are not enough IB spots for the demand at Maury). So no 4th grader would walk to Miner. The idea is that if you are currently IB for Maury, your older elementary kids could walk to Maury (or you could drop them off early since it's the closer school) and you could walk the 3 blocks to Miner for ECE drop off of younger kids.

Also, given that these schools are 3 block apart, the argument that the neighborhood around Miner is simply too dangerous to send kids to school there makes no sense. If there is a shooting 2 blocks from Miner, then there was a shooting (at most) 5 blocks from Maury. These schools are very close to each other.

I wish y'all would just admit: you like that your kids got to school with UMC, mostly white kids, and you don't want your kids to go to school with poor black kids. Because you and I both know that's the issue.


Miner is a much more dangerous location than most parts of the Maury zone. This is just a fact. It is basically right on the Starburst which is one of the most dangerous and zombified corners of the entire city.

Maury parents already send their kids to school with “poor black kids.” Thanks for playing the inevitable race card, which is exactly what the nameless DC bureaucrat who thought this up intended. “Hmm, what can I do to deflect from the fact that DCPS is failing poor black kids? I know - create a fake race controversy and mess up two schools, then blame it all on white parents!”


Kids don't go to school in "most parts of the Maury zone." They go to Maury. Which is 3 blocks from Miner. That is the relevant issue -- how close together are these schools, does it make sense to cluster them.

Many Maury parents send their kids to Miner for PK already, because it's so hard to get into Maury PK without sibling AND boundary preference. It's very common. So it's established that parents in the Maury zone are fine sending their kids to Miner, and are fine with the PK classes there. If Miner is already the default ECE backup for Maury kids, why not formalize that? It would solve the problem of insufficient PK spots for Maury parents while also allowing Miner to focus on the thing they already do pretty well. With the 0-3s center being built as well, Miner essentially becomes an early childhood center that can focus on the specific needs of younger children, can focus outdoor areas and school programming around that group.

For upper grades, nothing would change for Maury parents EXCEPT the addition of kids currently IB for Miner, who currently skew poorer and less white than those now at Maury. Everything else stays the same -- facility, teachers, admin. The only difference is using the capacity gained from moving PK3-K or PK3-1 to Miner to expand upper grades to include kids living in the Miner boundary.

This is what people who are upset about this proposal are actually upset about. It's not the distance between the schools -- they are very close and may parents already send kids to Miner for PK. It's not neighborhood crime, these schools are in the same neighborhood. It's the composition of the classes and discomfort with a poorer, blacker school population.


Is this true? I chose to pay for daycare over sending my kid into Miner, and I don't know anyone my kid's class that sent their kids to Miner. I would guess that of course some parents choose this route, but "many"?


21 to AppleTree and 13 to Miner in 2021-22, if I'm reading the data correctly. (Agree this is not "many" in a meaningful sense.)


13 is "many" to me. That's almost a full PK class. Is that 21 just for Apple Tree Lincoln Park or does it include the Oklahoma Ave. campus? Either way, what that says to me is that not only does Maury not have enough PK seats for IB families, but even a PK-only charter that is very close to Maury doesn't have enough capacity to absorb all the excess.

Maury parents have complained for years about the problem of PK access.

I also think it's interesting that some on this thread are convinced that combining the schools would immediately "infect" Maury with Miner's issues with administration. Why? To me the problems Miner has had getting competent administrators is a point in favor of combining the schools. Maury is a well-run school with a good administration and a great PTO. Usually when you have an example of a terrific school in a district, you want to export what is working to other schools. So why not export what works at Maury to Miner? Why does this automatically mean Maury will suffer and not that Miner will benefit?

Is Maury a strong school because of the effort of teachers, administrators, and community, or is it a strong school because of demographics? It's just not clear to me why this is automatically a bad idea. I get the objections about commute, but to me that is not a compelling reason to throw out the proposal altogether, especially when these schools are already quite close together and already a decent number of Maury families use Miner for ECE.


You sound incredibly naive. Schools are not businesses to merge. If Miner needs better administration, it is beyond irresponsible for DCPS to decide, “hey, how about we just combine it with a school with good administration?” instead of, you know, taking responsibility for the Miner administration directly. I can’t believe I’m going to use this word, but it is almost a kind of belief in colonization of the “poor” school by the enlightened “rich” school.


This is an interesting discussion, and one could argue it be viewed from the opposite perspective as well. Families who choose to enroll in a DCPS school do so knowing the school is part of a bigger school system. Each school does not exist in a vacuum. Decisions about many aspects of the school are made at a citywide level, and as you can see on the Miner thread, leadership shifts between schools when necessary. In this situation, not only is the school part of the same system, but it exists a few blocks away, and feeds into the same middle school. When you are part of a bigger organization or system, sometimes decisions may be made that impact more than one piece/school - and in this situation, clustering the schools may make sense for multiple reasons that have been listed already in this thread, not just the administration piece.


Nobody has given a reason, other than some Pollyannish and frankly somewhat offensive belief that Miner can only improve if combined with Maury.


Some of you need to take a step back and consider how you are approaching opposition to this proposal. I say this as someone who is outside the Maury and Miner boundaries but very familiar with DCPS and with the factors that led to this proposal.

Whining about commuting between campuses, dismissing the existing issue of PK capacity for IB families at Miner, complaining about crime around Miner (even though Miner is incredibly close to Maury so much of that crime is ALSO near Maury) -- none of this is compelling and really does come off as rich white parents getting mad about the idea of their kids going to school with more poor black kids. I'm not saying that's what it is -- I get the commute issues and why that would be irritating, and I understand the difference between Miner's location and Maury's in terms of crime. But I'm just telling you how it sounds to an outsiders ear.

If you want to oppose this cluster, I think you need to back up and focus on two things. (1) are the logical reasons put forth for the cluster sound? and (2) is the cluster achievable from a logistical standpoint.

Regarding #1, I would be asking whether looking at current school demographics makes sense for making predictions for what a combined cluster would look like demographically. Miner gets a large percentage of students from OOB, in part because UMC families in it's boundary (which there are a decent number of due to gentrification in Kingman Park) don't feel good about the school. If suddenly they're part of a Miner-Maury cluster, more might choose IB, which would actually push out many of the black and low SES students the school now serves.

On the other hand, if combining the schools causes UMC families in both boundaries to look at charters, privates, or move, then you don't get the rising tide the DME is suggesting might come from combining the schools.

I would also raise questions about logistics. Do not focus on drop-off times -- that's an easy fix that is easy dismiss because you can just stagger drop offs or enable parents to drop off older kids on the playground early. Instead, look at facilities. Do they make sense for a cluster? What about aspects of Maury's renovation that were specifically designed for ECE -- if the cluster happens, all of that will need to be retrofitted for upper grades and its wasted investment. Meanwhile, Miner would need a major overhaul to make it work as an ECE-focused campus. It got a new K-5 playground geared toward older kids just 4 years ago, for instance. Does it have enough classrooms with sinks and bathrooms to accommodate the ECE populations at both schools? How much would it cost to make that happen?

If ya'll come in complaining about how the change would add 20 minutes to your personal commute or pointing fingers at Miner's administrative problems as evidence that Miner is a "bad" school that you don't want to send your kids to, I hope you realize that you will wind up looking like whiny, privileged, mostly white parents who just don't want poor black kids at your school. Instead, make a reasoned argument as to why this proposal is unlikely to accomplish its intended goals, and point out the financial, structural, and logistical barriers to making it happen. Stay calm and reasonable. It's not a great proposal but it's not ENTIRELY without merit -- acknowledge the issues of inequity between schools but then calmly state why a cluster is unlikely to address that inequity. By all means, point out how the CH cluster has failed to meaningfully improve equity in it's boundary and how the cluster approach has in some ways divided the boundary even more aggressively along racial and SES lines.


So there actually is no good reason to do it other than some absolutely unsubstantiated notion of “equity.” I note that you not only are not part of the community but you also have your facts wrong about crime etc. And miss me with the racial shaming. There’s zero evidence this will help Miner, or that Miner families actually want this, and it seems to be *entirely* based on the offensive notion that the mere addition of white kids “improves” a school. What in the world?

I’ll say it again - if the DME thinks Miner needs more support then *give Miner more support.* Directly. The notion that an injection of whiteness is the only way Miner can be “improved” by DCPS is bizarre and wrong on so many levels.


I'm trying to HELP you. When you act like equity is stupid and pointless, you shoot yourself in the foot.

The point is that the cluster is unlikely to accomplish its equity goals and likely to create additional problems that undermine an existing, successful neighborhood school.

So take the proposal seriously and challenge it on the merits. Stomping your feet, pointing at NW schools, and rolling your eyes at the idea of equity just makes it seem like you are mad about the prospect of sending your kids to school with poor black kids (complaining that kids at Miner are "functionally illiterate" and then acting like if they go to school with your kids, their illiteracy will be contagious doesn't help either).

Consider that the goal of this proposal is to help a struggling school and that the kids at that school deserve better. And then explain why the cluster will not get them that. Try sounding like you give a damn that families at Miner are being poorly served right now.


No, you are not helping at all. I don’t agree that “equity” means “more white people in the school.” “equity” for Miner means: put more resources into the school. get them better administrators. provide intensive phonics and reading remediation. THAT is equity.
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Anonymous wrote:Doesn't the Peabody/Watkins cluster actually prove that pairing the schools is not a viable solution to the identified problem? I can't find socioeconomic data, but looking at the racial demographic data on My School DC, Peabody's demographics are very similar to Maury's, and very different from Watkins'. And I believe Peabody and Watkins started closer together than Maury and Miner would.

Maybe they're hoping that people will be okay with Miner for pre-K and the Maury name will keep people in for the upper grades. But again, my understanding of when the cluster began is that Watkins was considered a pretty desirable school.


The Peabody/Watkins cluster historically had many, many issues that caused all kinds of problems (many based on historical racism), and so it's hard to extrapolate a lot from that particular cluster because of that. I'd say the most relevant problem today is the lack of bus transportation between the 2 buildings. When there were buses, many families did actually go through Peabody and then through Watkins; I know because I was one of those families. Many did peel off, but again, that was largely due to all the other problems that already existed within the Cluster for decades.


The need for busses is caused by the cluster!!! It is moronic to argue that the cluster is not a failed experiment and instead pin the blame on an externality caused by the cluster. You must work for DCPS.


Part of the reason people felt like they need those buses was because the schools in the cluster school are significantly further apart and the boundary is very long and skinny. If this Maury Miner cluster happened, those schools are only three blocks apart so parents could easily drop kids off at both locations during the 8: 15 to 845 drop off window. Also parking by Peabody to do drop off his horrible which also was an incentive for the bus,


I don't know what the Miner schedule is, but drop off at Maury is between 8:30 and 8:40 for kids not eating breakfast. And the three blocks translates to an extra 20 minutes (conservatively) for me, which would be another 40 minutes a day. I get that it's closer than Peabody/Watkins (and it is absolutely outrageous that DCPS doesn't offer transportation there), but it would be a pretty huge inconvenience nevertheless.


Interesting, can kids not play on the playground if they are not eating breakfast? I do imagine that if this actually happened they would make drop off schedules that would accommodate both schools/parents.


LOL nope.


NP. Why nope? It seems like there would be lots of ways to do drop off and pick up to accommodate parents at both schools, given their proximity. Especially because of the age split between campuses. A staggered drop off schedule with greater flexibility for the upper school campus, where you can have higher child to teacher ratios (and thus have a larger group of kids on the playground or in the cafeteria with fewer minders until school starts). Also for families that live nearby, by 4th grade your kids can be walking on their own.

As for the time, I personally wouldn't mind that extra walk, but lots of families get cargo bikes for this reason. I know a bunch of families with kids in daycare and and elementary schools that are a lot further apart than Maury and Miner, do it by cargo bike, and can throw in a couple errands and still make their commute to work or make it back home in a reasonable length of time.

I don't know if the cluster makes sense or not -- I would have to think more critically about whether combining those two school populations would really result in a "rising tide lifts all boats" situation, or just result in shedding UMC families altogether in a way that undermines Maury's success. I am not sure, though I understand why they are looking for ways to help the school population at Miner, because it has a very decent ECE program but dismal test scores in 3-5, and clearly loses most of its high-resource kids by 2nd or 3rd, which makes it a lot harder because when every kid is high-risk, no one gets what they need.

But the idea that the main objection is drop-off logistics seems silly on its face. Maury students spent two years in a swing space while the school was renovated, and that posed drop-off issues too. But the renovations was of course worth it and was well worth those adjustments. If a cluster could be beneficial in the long run, adjusting start times or having a slightly less convenient school commute for a few years just seems like such a minor complaint to me.


Let me guess— you still have kids in strollers, right? If you think Maury parents are going to feel safe letting their 4th grader walk to Miner, you need to understand your neighborhood better.


Nope, two elementary age kids.

The proposal is, I think, for Miner to be the ECE center because ECE at Miner is already pretty decent (and a not insignificant number of Maury parents send their kids there for PK3 and/or PK4 because there are not enough IB spots for the demand at Maury). So no 4th grader would walk to Miner. The idea is that if you are currently IB for Maury, your older elementary kids could walk to Maury (or you could drop them off early since it's the closer school) and you could walk the 3 blocks to Miner for ECE drop off of younger kids.

Also, given that these schools are 3 block apart, the argument that the neighborhood around Miner is simply too dangerous to send kids to school there makes no sense. If there is a shooting 2 blocks from Miner, then there was a shooting (at most) 5 blocks from Maury. These schools are very close to each other.

I wish y'all would just admit: you like that your kids got to school with UMC, mostly white kids, and you don't want your kids to go to school with poor black kids. Because you and I both know that's the issue.


Miner is a much more dangerous location than most parts of the Maury zone. This is just a fact. It is basically right on the Starburst which is one of the most dangerous and zombified corners of the entire city.

Maury parents already send their kids to school with “poor black kids.” Thanks for playing the inevitable race card, which is exactly what the nameless DC bureaucrat who thought this up intended. “Hmm, what can I do to deflect from the fact that DCPS is failing poor black kids? I know - create a fake race controversy and mess up two schools, then blame it all on white parents!”


Kids don't go to school in "most parts of the Maury zone." They go to Maury. Which is 3 blocks from Miner. That is the relevant issue -- how close together are these schools, does it make sense to cluster them.

Many Maury parents send their kids to Miner for PK already, because it's so hard to get into Maury PK without sibling AND boundary preference. It's very common. So it's established that parents in the Maury zone are fine sending their kids to Miner, and are fine with the PK classes there. If Miner is already the default ECE backup for Maury kids, why not formalize that? It would solve the problem of insufficient PK spots for Maury parents while also allowing Miner to focus on the thing they already do pretty well. With the 0-3s center being built as well, Miner essentially becomes an early childhood center that can focus on the specific needs of younger children, can focus outdoor areas and school programming around that group.

For upper grades, nothing would change for Maury parents EXCEPT the addition of kids currently IB for Miner, who currently skew poorer and less white than those now at Maury. Everything else stays the same -- facility, teachers, admin. The only difference is using the capacity gained from moving PK3-K or PK3-1 to Miner to expand upper grades to include kids living in the Miner boundary.

This is what people who are upset about this proposal are actually upset about. It's not the distance between the schools -- they are very close and may parents already send kids to Miner for PK. It's not neighborhood crime, these schools are in the same neighborhood. It's the composition of the classes and discomfort with a poorer, blacker school population.


Is this true? I chose to pay for daycare over sending my kid into Miner, and I don't know anyone my kid's class that sent their kids to Miner. I would guess that of course some parents choose this route, but "many"?


21 to AppleTree and 13 to Miner in 2021-22, if I'm reading the data correctly. (Agree this is not "many" in a meaningful sense.)


13 is "many" to me. That's almost a full PK class. Is that 21 just for Apple Tree Lincoln Park or does it include the Oklahoma Ave. campus? Either way, what that says to me is that not only does Maury not have enough PK seats for IB families, but even a PK-only charter that is very close to Maury doesn't have enough capacity to absorb all the excess.

Maury parents have complained for years about the problem of PK access.

I also think it's interesting that some on this thread are convinced that combining the schools would immediately "infect" Maury with Miner's issues with administration. Why? To me the problems Miner has had getting competent administrators is a point in favor of combining the schools. Maury is a well-run school with a good administration and a great PTO. Usually when you have an example of a terrific school in a district, you want to export what is working to other schools. So why not export what works at Maury to Miner? Why does this automatically mean Maury will suffer and not that Miner will benefit?

Is Maury a strong school because of the effort of teachers, administrators, and community, or is it a strong school because of demographics? It's just not clear to me why this is automatically a bad idea. I get the objections about commute, but to me that is not a compelling reason to throw out the proposal altogether, especially when these schools are already quite close together and already a decent number of Maury families use Miner for ECE.


You sound incredibly naive. Schools are not businesses to merge. If Miner needs better administration, it is beyond irresponsible for DCPS to decide, “hey, how about we just combine it with a school with good administration?” instead of, you know, taking responsibility for the Miner administration directly. I can’t believe I’m going to use this word, but it is almost a kind of belief in colonization of the “poor” school by the enlightened “rich” school.


This is an interesting discussion, and one could argue it be viewed from the opposite perspective as well. Families who choose to enroll in a DCPS school do so knowing the school is part of a bigger school system. Each school does not exist in a vacuum. Decisions about many aspects of the school are made at a citywide level, and as you can see on the Miner thread, leadership shifts between schools when necessary. In this situation, not only is the school part of the same system, but it exists a few blocks away, and feeds into the same middle school. When you are part of a bigger organization or system, sometimes decisions may be made that impact more than one piece/school - and in this situation, clustering the schools may make sense for multiple reasons that have been listed already in this thread, not just the administration piece.


Nobody has given a reason, other than some Pollyannish and frankly somewhat offensive belief that Miner can only improve if combined with Maury.


Some of you need to take a step back and consider how you are approaching opposition to this proposal. I say this as someone who is outside the Maury and Miner boundaries but very familiar with DCPS and with the factors that led to this proposal.

Whining about commuting between campuses, dismissing the existing issue of PK capacity for IB families at Miner, complaining about crime around Miner (even though Miner is incredibly close to Maury so much of that crime is ALSO near Maury) -- none of this is compelling and really does come off as rich white parents getting mad about the idea of their kids going to school with more poor black kids. I'm not saying that's what it is -- I get the commute issues and why that would be irritating, and I understand the difference between Miner's location and Maury's in terms of crime. But I'm just telling you how it sounds to an outsiders ear.

If you want to oppose this cluster, I think you need to back up and focus on two things. (1) are the logical reasons put forth for the cluster sound? and (2) is the cluster achievable from a logistical standpoint.

Regarding #1, I would be asking whether looking at current school demographics makes sense for making predictions for what a combined cluster would look like demographically. Miner gets a large percentage of students from OOB, in part because UMC families in it's boundary (which there are a decent number of due to gentrification in Kingman Park) don't feel good about the school. If suddenly they're part of a Miner-Maury cluster, more might choose IB, which would actually push out many of the black and low SES students the school now serves.

On the other hand, if combining the schools causes UMC families in both boundaries to look at charters, privates, or move, then you don't get the rising tide the DME is suggesting might come from combining the schools.

I would also raise questions about logistics. Do not focus on drop-off times -- that's an easy fix that is easy dismiss because you can just stagger drop offs or enable parents to drop off older kids on the playground early. Instead, look at facilities. Do they make sense for a cluster? What about aspects of Maury's renovation that were specifically designed for ECE -- if the cluster happens, all of that will need to be retrofitted for upper grades and its wasted investment. Meanwhile, Miner would need a major overhaul to make it work as an ECE-focused campus. It got a new K-5 playground geared toward older kids just 4 years ago, for instance. Does it have enough classrooms with sinks and bathrooms to accommodate the ECE populations at both schools? How much would it cost to make that happen?

If ya'll come in complaining about how the change would add 20 minutes to your personal commute or pointing fingers at Miner's administrative problems as evidence that Miner is a "bad" school that you don't want to send your kids to, I hope you realize that you will wind up looking like whiny, privileged, mostly white parents who just don't want poor black kids at your school. Instead, make a reasoned argument as to why this proposal is unlikely to accomplish its intended goals, and point out the financial, structural, and logistical barriers to making it happen. Stay calm and reasonable. It's not a great proposal but it's not ENTIRELY without merit -- acknowledge the issues of inequity between schools but then calmly state why a cluster is unlikely to address that inequity. By all means, point out how the CH cluster has failed to meaningfully improve equity in it's boundary and how the cluster approach has in some ways divided the boundary even more aggressively along racial and SES lines.


So there actually is no good reason to do it other than some absolutely unsubstantiated notion of “equity.” I note that you not only are not part of the community but you also have your facts wrong about crime etc. And miss me with the racial shaming. There’s zero evidence this will help Miner, or that Miner families actually want this, and it seems to be *entirely* based on the offensive notion that the mere addition of white kids “improves” a school. What in the world?

I’ll say it again - if the DME thinks Miner needs more support then *give Miner more support.* Directly. The notion that an injection of whiteness is the only way Miner can be “improved” by DCPS is bizarre and wrong on so many levels.


I'm trying to HELP you. When you act like equity is stupid and pointless, you shoot yourself in the foot.

The point is that the cluster is unlikely to accomplish its equity goals and likely to create additional problems that undermine an existing, successful neighborhood school.

So take the proposal seriously and challenge it on the merits. Stomping your feet, pointing at NW schools, and rolling your eyes at the idea of equity just makes it seem like you are mad about the prospect of sending your kids to school with poor black kids (complaining that kids at Miner are "functionally illiterate" and then acting like if they go to school with your kids, their illiteracy will be contagious doesn't help either).

Consider that the goal of this proposal is to help a struggling school and that the kids at that school deserve better. And then explain why the cluster will not get them that. Try sounding like you give a damn that families at Miner are being poorly served right now.


I take it that you are role-playing a reaction and not lobbing the accusation yourself, but the way people make this about race is frustrating. There's a neighborhood mom on Twitter explicitly comparing opposition to the cluster to southern segregationists snarlingly protesting school integration.

I've seen people point out the challenges that come with a large cohort of below-grade level kids -- and in fairness, those challenges are real -- and obviously everyone knows that things like test scores and grades correlate very strongly with socioeconomic status, which itself has a relationship with race. But I haven't seen anything that even had a whiff of race-based opposition, and it's a shame that people are trying to quash opposition by slinging accusations like that.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I’d be interested in others’ takes on the meeting, but here’s a TLDR of how it felt.

DME: This is a listening session to get your feedback on possible changes to address challenges.
Parents: Ok, so what are the possible changes?
DME: We want to cluster you with Miner.
Parents: I don’t think we like that.
DME: We would encourage you to think about it differently.
Parents: Ok. What are the challenges this is supposed to address?
DME: Socioeconomic disparities between neighboring schools.
Parents: Are we the only school with this challenge?
DME: Goodness, no, you’re not even close to the worst one. You’re just the only one we are considering clustering.
Parents: Can you reconsider?
DME: We hear you. But no.


they clearly have targeted Maury as a pilot for this.


Do they have any specifics on logistics? Have they thought at all what it takes to combine two separate institutions?

I thought any changes were supposed to be a slow roll out, so students enrolled in a school as of the 2025-2026 school year may choose to stay or attend their new school. How would that work at all with this cluster proposal?
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I’d be interested in others’ takes on the meeting, but here’s a TLDR of how it felt.

DME: This is a listening session to get your feedback on possible changes to address challenges.
Parents: Ok, so what are the possible changes?
DME: We want to cluster you with Miner.
Parents: I don’t think we like that.
DME: We would encourage you to think about it differently.
Parents: Ok. What are the challenges this is supposed to address?
DME: Socioeconomic disparities between neighboring schools.
Parents: Are we the only school with this challenge?
DME: Goodness, no, you’re not even close to the worst one. You’re just the only one we are considering clustering.
Parents: Can you reconsider?
DME: We hear you. But no.


they clearly have targeted Maury as a pilot for this.


Do they have any specifics on logistics? Have they thought at all what it takes to combine two separate institutions?

I thought any changes were supposed to be a slow roll out, so students enrolled in a school as of the 2025-2026 school year may choose to stay or attend their new school. How would that work at all with this cluster proposal?


Their presentation didn't even commit to which school would be for the upper years and which for the lower. It just said, could be Miner for the younger kids! They have thought about this zero.

The DME rep said this is the "idea" stage where they are just trying to figure out if this can work. But the timeline she outlined means a very quick path from the idea stage to the final recommendation in Jan/Feb (I can't remember exactly).

It took Tyler three years to go through the process just of re-naming the school.
Anonymous
[quote=Anonymous]

I take it that you are role-playing a reaction and not lobbing the accusation yourself, but the way people make this about race is frustrating. There's a neighborhood mom on Twitter explicitly comparing opposition to the cluster to southern segregationists snarlingly protesting school integration.

I've seen people point out the challenges that come with a large cohort of below-grade level kids -- and in fairness, those challenges are real -- and obviously everyone knows that things like test scores and grades correlate very strongly with socioeconomic status, which itself has a relationship with race.[b] But I haven't seen anything that even had a whiff of race-based opposition, and it's a shame that people are trying to quash opposition by slinging accusations like that.[/b][/quote]

This 100%. And if you talk to Maury parents of color, which I have—because Maury is really quite diverse!—you realize that this is not some monolithic racial issue. I’ve talked to a handful of parents of color in my son’s class and have yet to find one who is supportive of the cluster concept.
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