DP. Community isn’t bogus, it’s what makes public schools successful. Would give anything for the school board to understand that. |
You define and redefine “community” as you see fit to stay zoned to certain schools. |
| Well, certainly proximity affects community. Kind of don't understand why people on south side of 7 and have a Herndon address are zoned for Langley. |
Nope, you must be confusing me with someone else. Community is everything to us, and we certainly aren’t the only ones that feel that way. Really wish the school board would understand that. |
If you think this is bad, go look up how the community reacted when they closed Clifton Elementary. |
People fight to stay in certain schools when a small chunk gets moved. If you wholesale moved Madison's student body to Marshall, in 3 years it would just be Madison. The culture would change, the baseball team would be a lot better, etc. School performance is almost entirely a result of what the families put into it. In all the 90s movies about kids at rough schools turning things around, it's because teachers get the students and parents to see the value of education. Not because they magically made the quality of the education offered better. It's the community that sets those values. |
It’s amusing that you pretend a sense of community is enhanced by sending kids to a different HS than 80% of both their ES and their MS classmates. |
It's telling you didn't challenge the assumption that communities make the good schools... |
Why is it so important to you to dictate what people define as their community? This is clearly coming from someone who doesn't have any and is just bitter other people do. |
There’s no point because people typically will just define “community” as they see fit to stay assigned or get reassigned to wealthier schools. |
Ok (wink) |
+1 If they put AP at Marshall, there’d be less opposition, but there’s a fairly obvious narrative from Wolftrap and Lemon Road families trying to upgrade to the richer schools. Marshall is split between Vienna, McLean, and Falls Church for youth sports, so its sense of community really suffers at the elementary level. |
Did you seriously just cite "movies from the 90's" as a blueprint to turn rough schools around. I'm literally dying from the insane amount of privilege and complete cluelessness you displayed. This is literally the most white suburban Karen thing to ever be muttered and I can't wait to share this at the Thanksgiving table tomorrow so I can laugh again. |
DP. Absurd reference, but the underlying point is right. Schools will never improve if importance of education and achievement isn't in the home. Move those kids around all you want - a kid that isn't getting reinforcement at home isn't going to get into Harvard because some boundary tetris puts them at Madison. |
In the 1800s there was a doctor who suggested that hand-washing would reduce mortality rates in childbirth. The upper class doctors were all offended they were being called unclean and the practice first caught on in hospitals for the poor. Which the rich women all went to when giving birth because they didn't want to die. It has nothing to do with money although you weirdly keep making it about that. It has to do with the underlying values and beliefs of the people at the schools. My guess is that you aren't at one of the schools people are fighting to stay at, and that you fit in just fine. |