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DC Public and Public Charter Schools
Reply to "New Report on Racial and Economic Diversity in DC public and charter schools"
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]Chicago sounds like a real pain in the tuchas for families with school-age children. San Francisco, too. And Manhattan. It's really tough to be a highly-educated person who loves an urban environment but also wants to raise well-educated kids. On the bright side: the availability of self-determined options in D.C. is a lot better than what's available in some other cities.[/quote] spare me. you don't get to "love an urban environment" and not have to, you know, actually LIVE with your neighbors side by side. [/quote] You're trying to say something else. Obviously, everyone who lives in the city lives next to their neighbors, "side by side." You seem to be really angry that some people who have money can get a good school for their kids AND live in the city; whereas you are stuck with literally the worst performing school system in the United States because you either can't, or refuse, to move into a better public school boundary. If you own your residence, it's still possible to move into a condo in a better school zone, depending on how much you care about your child's education. Clearly, we need more condos to make choices along this line even easier; but you don't seem the type to even consider it. Stew away.[/quote]
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