The Maury situation shows what the DME office really thinks of middle class families who actually do this and how it can be yanked away any time. Private, charters or moving are the choices. WFH will allow my family to move once 9th grade is approaching. |
You're the person who posted about high truancy rates at Deal and JR, unaware that Deal has a 7.5% chronic absenteeism rate and that there are middle schools where 85% of the students are chronically absent. You don't know what's going on in the rest of the city because you don't have to, which is understandable. But I know a lot about my neighborhood schools because if there were any glimmer of hope that they were acceptable, it would be so much easier to send my kids there. My kids are in a Title 1 ES, by the way, so that's not the issue for me. But the zoned middle school is not acceptable along any dimension. |
This. This. This. Also increasing the middle class SES makeup of a school by say 30% in ward 4 is going to do nothing with improving the school. Posters who think this are delusional, especially at the middle school level. The focus is still and will always be on the bottom in DCPS. These kids who are 3+ grade levels will be the focus of all the resources and if anyone thinks that the middle school is going to miraculously offer any advance programming, I’ve got a bridge to sell you. I mean just look at JR and honors for all. Get out of DCPS and their race to the bottom. End of story |
I misread the previous poster's message and thought they were talking about solving capacity issues rather than program/perceived quality issues. I'm still not clear on why charters should care about changed Ward 4 boundaries. Is the idea that changing Ward 4 boundaries will give families access to more desirable DCPS schools and there'd be less demand for charters?
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Can this be the new Maury-Miner thread? lol
Anyone know why the other one got locked? |
there was a major troll that entered the conversation at the end. I think it was about time to close it. |
It would likely improve the test scores and many people equate test scores with good schools. It might also lighten the load a bit for teachers -- it is extremely hard to prepare and plan for and instruct when the overwhelming majority of kids are coming behind grade level. Better scores and a better adult/teacher culture will attract more people and the school will then be deemed better. |
Again, citation please. |
PP has no citation because the fact is Wells (middle that feeds to Coolidge) and Roosevelt are more over crowded than Deal/JR (JR now that MacArthur opened). https://dme.dc.gov/sites/default/files/dc/sites/dme/publication/attachments/Appendix%20A%20-%20DCPS%20SY2021-22%20Enrollment%20Utilization%20Plans%20MFP%202022%20Supp_Final_0.xlsx Macfarland is at 84% (same as Janney, and well under Hardy 64%). So really the talk should be how to get more kids into Hardy, but for some reason none of these DCUM warriors ever would make a post like that, right? Very easy to push brown kids east to fit your narrative. |
This is so true. I wish we had better ways to talk about it. People have these very flat, unnuanced views about education because they don't understand these dynamics. So when we talk about "good schools" a lot to times we're just talking about schools where the majority of students have the resources at home to get good test scores. That's really what the tests ulimately measure. My kid attends a Title 1 with about 70% at risk kids. The test scores are what people on DCUM would call "a failing school." A large percentage of students score between a 1 and a 3 on the PARCC. Lots of 1s. People see that and say "the school is failing." At the school, everyone is aware of these test scores and there are efforts made to address them. But the school isn't failing. Not as a school and it's not failing the at risk kids. The school does so much for these kids. It helps them get fed, provides a safe place for them, provides tutoring and after school programming. The teachers are caring and patient and for many of these kids, their teachers may be one of the few caring, patient adults they interact with. The school is going above and beyond. The truth is that these kids simply do not have the resources to get high test scores. That is the conclusion I've come to after years of being at this school. Kids who are experiencing homelessness, parents in jail or prison, domestic violence, poverty and hunger, etc., are simply never going to get high test scores. On the pyramid of needs, they are still falling short on the first level of the pyramid. Perhaps occasionally a very gifted and motivated child with no learning disabilities at all and who has an unusual capacity for surviving trauma will break through and do very well on tests even though they have these issues. But that's a rare exception. Even with the school working very hard to help meet these kids' needs (physical, mental, social, academic), children in these situations are going to have, on average, low test scores. Period. My own child is very bright but if she were experiencing the stuff these kids experience daily, she'd also have low test scores. She's a sensitive person who gets frightened easily, and when she has stress she stores it in her body and it takes work to help her let it go. If she were housing insecure, hungry every day, dealing with violence at home or a parent who was sick or just gone, she'd be getting 1s and 2s on PARCC. But she doesn't have any of that and she's super well supported at home. So she gets 4s and 5s. When I look at the test scores for our school, that's what I see. I can see the kids who are supported and well-resourced and those are our 4s and 5s. I can see the kids who have fewer resources but might not have active trauma, or may be more resilient generally but dealing with a lot of trauma. They get 3s and 4s. And then there are a lot of kids who are typical, great kids, have a ton of obstacles and very limited resources outsides school, and they get 1s and 2s. The scores reflect the home lives of the kids. The school itself is great, and I would venture to say that it does more and is more successful at what it does than your average school with a largely high-SES student population, but our school has to do so many things that schools with well-off kids never have to do. But all of this is invisible on the test scores. The test scores just tell you what percent of kids at our school have parents and families who can support them and provide what they need to be successful on tests. |
dp--The "permanent capacity" numbers that DME uses are crap. A bunch of schools -- Hardy and J-R, for example, have numbers pulled out of the air, not reality. Go walk around the schools during the day and then let's talk. |
No, the test scores also tell you whether your kid who is at grade level or advanced has any chance in hell of getting an appropriate education, or whether the focus is going to be on kids who need remediation. My kids are also at a Title 1 ES now and it's wonderful in a whole variety of ways, but there are big gaps in their education and I can only do so much at home. I don't think my zoned middle school is necessarily "failing" because of low test scores and high truancy rates, but I sure think it would fail my kids. So do most of other the families zoned for it, including those who opt for other middle schools which also have high proportions of at-risk kids. People don't send their kids to most of the zoned middle schools and high schools in DC because they are accurately determining that their kids will have better experiences elsewhere. This is not that complicated. |
Unnuanced view my ass. My oldest was a Title 1 school and we got the hell out of there as soon because it was obvious that each passing year would place them further behind and not having learned what they should at an age appropriate pace. That school—with dedicated, caring teachers and staff—would have failed my kids. |
That's bull. I have been in Deal/JR/Wells/Roosevelt during the day. Should we all agree DC government and fire code folks are just lying to fit the narrative that Roosevelt is more crowded than JR because you "feel" like it shouldn't be right?!! |
PP here. You should make the choice that makes sense for your family but I have not found that my school fails my kid (who participates in summer CTY camps and I know to be above grade level generally even against peers who attend non-Title 1 schools and private schools where far more kids are at or above grade level, and who is challenged at school). My point was that saying a school is "failing" because it has low test scores while serving a predominantly at risk student population makes no sense. That's where the lack of nuance is. If your standard for a school succeeding is "PARCC scores are mostly 4s and 5s" then the only successful schools will be the ones where most students are MC or UMC, because that is what is required to get those scores. Granted, there are schools in DC where most students are MC or UMC and their scores are low. If you want to call those schools failing, I'm okay with that. But calling a school failing because it's mostly at risk population gets the scores that at risk kids always get ignores the fact that those schools are actually succeeding on a million metrics that a high-SES school doesn't even compete on because a high-SES school doesn't have to do all the stuff that a Title 1 school has to do for it's students. You don't have to send your kid to a Title 1 school. But if you choose not to, that doesn't mean it's a failing school. |