It's not the numbers, it's the optics. |
Agreed. What is the racial composition of those ~350 students referenced I wonder? |
True, a demagogue could use such a logical policy to stir the racial pot. |
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I am one of the PPs who mentioned Hearst. I am not saying I think it should get zoned out of Deal. But as someone currently looking for a house, I personally think Hearst being zoned out of Deal is more likely than Bancroft or Shepard. Not that it makes more sense, just that it may be more likely when you think about the optics/politics. Or at least it is likely enough that I would not buy in Hearst under the assumption that I would be zoned for Deal until the end of time (I would only make that assumption for Janney and Murch).
That is a completely different question from whether I think the policy of zoning Hearst to Hardy makes sense. |
| For all the posters that are saying how about we do not give the OOB kids the option of giving them the By-right-to-feed option or accounting that we bring over 30% of OOB children to deal. I do not know the numbers or do I care to but what I will say is this I live in the Ward 7 district in which I have purchased a home 9 years ago, I have put my 2 older children in a Ward 7 High School and Elementary School, but I refuse to put my now 5 year old DS in any Ward 7 elementary school. I want what's best for my son and I will give him that. My son was recently matched to Shepherd Elementary School for K and although it will be a hike from my Ward 7 home to Shepherd (my job sits in the middle to both)I am willing to sacrifice that trip and eventually to his middle feeder which would be Deal and later Wilson. I don't have the big money to afford to move in Ward 4 and definitely not Ward 3. I want what every working class mom wants for their child a excellent educational opportunity, the opportunity to learn in a diverse atmosphere, and for a safe environment as he travel to and from school as he matures and is able to commute on his own (7th or 8th grade). So before anyone down play OOB children just know some parents do work, have homes, have cars, and pay taxes just as you do. But one thing is for sure while my son will be attending Shepherd Elementary School and they decide not to allow my son his feeder rights to Deal and Wilson I will do what I have to do and occupy(Lie) my aunts address on Connecticut Ave. which she owns a condo. |
You always miss the point. No one arguing to shrink the boundary gives a shit what color the students at Deal are. They just want Deal to reduce its population so it's not so far overcapacity. I know you think it gives you some moral high ground to claim any change is secret racism, but you are wrong. If you want to have Deal access rights, just move into one of the neighborhoods near Deal. |
+1. Very simple, really. |
So what you're really saying is that there's a racial quota for Deal and Wilson, right? Even if it makes perfect sense from all logic to remove feeder rights or change the feeder pattern, it just can't be done because someone might claim racism. Correct? If that's what you're saying, let's get it out there in the open. |
+2 |
You guys aren't getting it. If you only remove Shepherd and Bancroft, you're still left with an overcrowded middle school. Janney continues to grow, as does Hearst and Lafayette. You have either remove one more school or don't remove any and open another middle school. |
| Y'all can have our spot at deal. I think it sounds awful. |
Yep that's what we are saying. |
+1 I'd rather have Hardy. |
I think you are mistaken. According to the DME material as from the boundary adjustment, Bancroft was supplying 11% of Deal students, and Shepherd was sending 7%. An 18% reduction in Deal's student body would put it well below the capacity max, which would leave room for the at-risk population DCPS was trying to mandate for each school, and potentially even leave room for future neighborhood growth. |
Try the math using capacity at Deal and Janny and Lafayette's 3rd grade classes. Also, do you have link? |