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DC Public and Public Charter Schools
Reply to "Importance of classmates being at grade levels for reading/math"
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]This thread kind of makes me jealous of the vast majority of American parents who just enroll their kids in their suburban boundary school because that’s what’s available to them. Though I realize it’s a double edge sword, if those schools don’t work for their kid, most parents do not have another option. Moving or private school aren’t realistic to most of our country, where in the DC UMC it seems almost like a given if things aren’t working out. [/quote] it is extremely coming throughout the rest of the country for parents to choose where they live specifically for the school their home is zoned for. Yes, they just send their kid to the local school, but they didn’t randomly end up where they did. DC seems to be full of more oblivious parents who wake up one day and realize the house they bought with the great walk to all the bars and coffee shops is zoned for a terrible school. [/quote] Other cities - not all of them, but a lot - have test-in programs and schools for kids with academic needs that won't be met otherwise. People outside have of DC have expressed surprise when I explain that, no, that's not a thing here. Obviously at some point as a parent you figure that out, but maybe not before you've moved here or bought a house. [/quote] I generally think people know their schools aren’t good but plan to lottery, go private, or move if it doesn’t work out. And for the most part, families who are buying in DC for the last ~10 years have the ability to do that. People buying for the schools in the burbs are often doing that because they know it’s their best option, whether the reason is that they can’t afford to move again or go private, or there isn’t really an option to go to an OOB or charter. [/quote] Because back then there was no Latin or Basis stealing the above average scoring kids out of the public system. The more charters, the more problems, DCPS has. I will say time went by very fast and when we bought in 2012 SH had a better reputation. [/quote][/quote] Yes those sneaky charter schools, snatching students away! Or maybe their parents are choosing Latin and BASIS because DCPS can't get it together to offer an adequate middle school.[/quote]
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