| I am a new-to-Hardy 6th grade parent and here are the preliminary numbers that I am sure of for kids in 6th from feeder schools: Mann:10, Stoddert:10. As well, here are estimates from parents from other feeders: Hyde: 30; Key 5. I will post confirmed numbers on Hyde and Key as I get them. If any current Key parents have better info, please post it. As well, there are some neighborhood kids - local and state department, embassy families - who went elementary school elsewhere. I know that 6th grade is fully subscribed at 130 kids and that there are a few more expected by end of September. |
Just look at the lottery results for prek for the last two years at these schools. No one got in OOB, and prek is your best shot statistically. |
IB 6th Hardy grade parent. I looked into the forecasts of feeder school kids, not IB. A group or feeder school parents interested in Hardy collected and provided those numbers (which proved to be lower bound estimates). The other parents I know from my IB school looked at those statistics too. IB is more convenient for playdates, which is not what drives school choice. Extremely happy with Hardy so far. |
A couple of Key kids left two years ago (the first year of Ms Pride's tenure). All IB students returned this year, except a few (2-3) who moved abroad or elsewhere (Florida). |
Oh god, here we go again. Someone up thread said this is more symbolic than substantive (you, pp?) but even so there are posters who want Hardy to change the policy before they would deign to consider enrolling rather than enrolling their kids, joining the PTA, and lobbying for the change. If it's not really a substantive problem it shouldn't keep people from enrolling their kids and mobilizing together to change the policy. I'm sorry, pp, because I know this is important to you but can you see how this comes across? As a former OOB mom, I'm all in support of you getting in there and trying to change the policy once your kids are enrolled but why should anyone listen to you if you won't make a commitment to the school? |
PP here. No, I'm not the one obsessed with uniforms. You've done an excellent job though of emphasizing the point I was trying to make, which is that 1) if you're trying to attract more IB families the existing families are not representative of the people you're trying to target; and 2) the idea of attracting more IB families is not exactly uncontroversial. |
| IB feeder parent here. I do not know a single parent who cares at all about the uniforms. The current IB parents with kids attending Hardy do not care about uniforms (which is why it hasn't been pushed compared to say - honors algebra or Mandarin). I know all of them care about how a Hardy experience would compare against other possible options (Latin, Basis, privates, moving elsewhere). Mostly based on academics and on social/happiness. The 10 Stoddert and 10 Mann and 5 Key (and others?) that are in the current 6th grade class are just like most of the parents I know, but with increased willingness to be 'early adopters' than most in the neighborhood. |
But isn't it obvious that if the uniforms were a big deal they wouldn't have chosen Hardy? Aren't the people to ask not the 25 families who chose Hardy, but the hundreds of families with kids in that age cohort who started at a feeder but left the system? Five years ago Key had 100 kindergarteners, 95 of them left. Where did they go and why? My point isn't about uniforms per se but about the greater challenge of making Hardy a neighborhood school. |
| It would be so easy to drop the uniforms, why don't they just drop them. |
I believe that the proposition of Hardy becoming a neighborhood middle school is, as a PP put it, "not exactly uncontroversial." |
| Shouldn't DCPS try to encourage neighborhood schools? |
It might be that the more prospective Ward 3 parents want the uniforms dropped, that others in the Hardy community who are wary of the school being changed too much by an influx of IB families, embrace the uniforms as a symbol of Hardy's heritage. |
It's not controversial with me! If the Hardy families want to get rid of uniforms, more power to them! I completely support whatever the Hardy families want to do about uniforms. So become a Hardy family and have at it. What is controversial is trying to dictate policy without actually being enrolled in the school. |
From a Latino high school child who went to Mann and onto a charter several years ago: "Mom, at Horace Mann we were taught that racism was bad......... and we had to listen to x story do y project and read z book. At "fill in the blank" charter school, we are taught that racism is bad. And we have had to read x,y and z books. Why can't we ever read anything with a happy ending that has nothing to do with racism?" Over program, and your over privileged kid becomes over exposed and overly cynical. Even while they understand the poverty aspect, the race aspect becomes a subject for ridicule, and for some reason the book "Night" by Elie Wiesel, about his personal experiences as a 12 year old child did not affect my jaded 12 year old (and another parent piped up that it was required reading in 5th grade at a different charter school and not too heavy for her son.......) I think people ought to consider very carefully what they are doing because yes everything is available on UTube. Just look up the SNL skit "28 reasons.........." on Black History Month. How did my child find this? Turned on to it by his friends. And then you have his black friends who have a very interesting sense of humor about race as well....... their parents would be just as shocked as I was. And none of us are white. I think what you are saying is more about poverty than race. And I think maybe our kids already realize that for them (unless they have to interact with a white policeman which we are still teaching them could turn deadly) it is more about poverty than race. And a little child shall lead them....... |
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