The don’t exist. You need to go to a charter. |
I would also like to see the no screen schools posted |
Ross. |
This shows how little parents know about edtech. Clever is a portal, not a program itself. |
| DCPS relies way too heavily on screens. I agree that if you want no or low screens, look at charters. |
| Are any of the schools open asked about low screen? |
Takoma is a long drive from Capitol Hill, and likely not on the way to work for the OP. |
I'm the OP here. Thanks so much for your thoughts on Lewis. I'm not an absolutist on screens. I can see their value - for example, my kids did a unit on Insects in PK and watched a bunch of videos on bugs. I mean, that's really the best way to watch, for example, praying mantis behavior. My kindergartener also does iReady right now, and I don't object to 30 minutes of self paced math/reading a day on an iPad. Another poster mentioned using computer games to drill math facts at ITDS - that seems really smart to me. We're not Amish - if there's a good use for a screen, use a screen. What I object to is HUGE quantities of time on screens (more than an hour or so in K-1, more than 2 hours in 2-5, roughly?), a default to all learning being on screens, and a lack of writing with a pen or pencil which study after study after study shows is linked to better learning, better retention, more student engagement, etc. You also need to have time away from a screen for your brain, for your emotions, for your learning to settle in. I object strongly to screens being used as a pacifier. Yup, they'll be quiet and calm if you hand them a screen. This is BAD not good. Kids aren't supposed to be quiet and calm all day. Additionally, particularly young kids need to move their bodies - I hate screens as a replacement for indoor recess. There should really never been any screens for specials IMHO - Spanish, PE, Music, Art, Library, etc - these should all be active for kids and there is no reason (beyond like, a movie the one week there's a sub) that they should be using screens for these classes for elementary schoolers. I will say that at least for my tour of John Lewis, they really seemed to be using screens the way you describe - lots of small groups (the principal said they aim to spend half their classroom time in small groups, which sounds great and was very much the case on our tour) and there'd be one group with one teacher, one with another, one doing something more engaging (writing, drawing, using manipulatives, whatever) and then one group on iPads. That seems totally reasonable to me. Seeing every single kid in every single room I looked at (hint: I look at all the rooms as we walk, not just the ones we're going to visit) on screens at Thomson, was incredibly jarring and not at all what I'm looking for in a school. And before someone jumps down my throat about parents using screens as pacifiers all the time, that is not us. We allow screens on airplanes and when our kids are sick, and then we watch a movie as a family about once a month, and that's IT. Screens are not a part of my kids' day to day lives at home (they're 4 and 6) and part of the reason we have been so limited about it at home is that we're not comfortable with the amount they're getting at school, it's just too much. |
| I think at DCPS staffing levels and budgets, you can have lots of small group and use screens to do it, or less screens and less small group work. It would be nice if the kids could do small groups independently but behavior is often so poor that it doesn't work out. |
OP here. As I said, I'm in Columbia Heights - Tacoma and Whittier are too long of a commute. I was unimpressed with both Height and Barnard at EdFest, so we ended up crossing them off our list. If someone wants to make a case for them, go right ahead. |
| It's really annoying how many people on this thread have said "oh, we were at a low screen school..." or "we were at a high screen school..." and are refusing to name the schools. It's an anonymous forum! |
| PP(s?): Whittier, despite being a STEM school, is low screen. |
Hmmm. My kids went to Whittier for a few years (and within the last 5 years) and this was not our experience at all. In fact, it was one of the things about the school that prompted us to look elsewhere. |
| I'm loling a bit at ITDS being described as a "grubby" school It's a renovated older building rather than a totally overhauled or brand new facility, but it also has a newly renovated basement level (with natural light!) with lots of class and flex spaces, and perfectly fine (in our opinion) elsewhere. the connection to the rec field is a huge bonus in our book. Compared to the pre-renovation DCPS facility we were in before moving to ITDS it's a dream! |
| OP is Columbia Heights. Later poster was on the Hill — I think there are tons of options on the Hill if you did not love ITDS (including OOB K combined with something more like Appletree for PreK3). |