We're also in that feeder pattern. Trust me, you wouldn't have wanted your child to go to MacFarland, either. We loved our elementary school, but (reluctantly) pulled our child out when he got into a charter that goes through 8th grade. When I saw that MacFarland was closing, I briefly regretted having taken our son away from his neighborhood school. I didn't think they could come up with a solution that was even worse than the status quo--but lo and behold, Roosevelt came to the rescue. |
Did you just say reefer Gramps? I am curious when did you enter the school and made it all the way to the restroom (prefered weed smoking lounge). I'm sure if you go to the parking lot or band room in the 'burbs Sr. high schools,you can catch a wiff of hemp in the air. Yes, I agree that six graders do not belong with 12th graders. But, don't put down Roosevelt because of your disapproval of grade placements. |
| So now that the list is out when do the changes in boundaries/feeders begin? Jan or Feb'v |
Roosevelt sounds like the perfect spot for the girl who walks past my house each morning in her MacFarland uniform, finishing up her last joint before school. |
| Boundaries and feeders schools will not have to change. Did they change when 26 schools were closed earlier? Stop saying that 6th grader will go to Roosevelt, the plan is to make Roosevelt-McFarland a campus with both schools having separate buildings but one agenda. This is just like when it was decided to rid the system of the Junior Highs and develop middle schools and all of sudden the cry of "my babies!!!" Here we are decades later and the outcry are the same "my babies" |
No. I'm a firm believer in separate primary, middle and high schools personally. Just totally different develomental periods, IMO. So I'm not a fan of K-8 or 6-12 models. |
Indeed. I am in Ward 4 with a small child but we are in a downtown charter. There are a growing number of white middle class folks (by DC standards, anyway) like us moving into our neighborhood, buying homes and putting down roots. |
That just seems odd too, sorry. Will it be split up by grades, or what? |
Wrong. The plan is to close the buildings altogether. Did you read the DCPS power point? |
which is great (that you're committed. . . not that you're white ). you still deserve a viable neighborhood school option. I find it puzzling how much ground DCPS is willing to cede wholesale to charters. The randomness of charter spaces can translate to logistical nightmares or sometimes perfect scenarios -- dropping your kid off at a great school a few doors from work or right on the wayis the dream for all of us, no?
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Yes, of course. That whole "putting down roots" thing will only last if the DCPS system improves, at least for me. We're giving it a few years and if we don't feel good about it and see improvement in the neighborhood schools, we'll move, plain and simple. For me, it's all about the mentality of the families and kids at the schools - I want my kid to be in a school where the majority of people value education and where it is not an ongoing ordeal to make sure he's in a good school. Getting into PS3 felt like a massive ordeal. |
Basis does this, also Cathedral and St Albans.... |
| St. Anselm's too. And it's just like DCPS. Yeah. Sure. Just like it. Nooooo difference at all. |
you read this, or skipped this part? 6-12 CAN and DOES work Not saying it WILL work here, but there is some precedent for these consolidations |
Physical separation at Latin now and in the future. |