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DC Public and Public Charter Schools
Reply to "All charters are not created equally"
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]What stood out to me in this article is that they had funds to do things that would never be available in the public school system. For example what the college counselors could do. What I see especially for those charters that can pull in kids from poorly performing areas, is that they can provide non-academic supports that make a huge difference. Sometimes this does not mean they have higher scores but they increase connections and opportunities that helps a group of highly motivated kids find a way out. We just had a family friend graduate from Wilson. He comes from a very poor family and has lots of needs, but they just could not help him in the way say KIPP probably could have. [/quote] Charters generally have less funds than DCPS but have more freedom on how to spend what they do get. [/quote] Yes, charters have more freedom to experiment with your children. Sometimes it works, and sometimes...[/quote] If you don't want something new and potentially untested, don't send your kid to a charter school. Talk about stating the obvious.[/quote] True--I don't and I won't. I can try new things with my child after school and on weekends. During school hours, I'll stick with what is tried and true. The stakes are too high.[/quote] Just out of curiosity, which DCPS does your child attend?[/quote] A WotP Ward 3 school with high test scores and solid academics--tried and true. We live IB so we also enjoy the "neighborhood feel." Our children have received exactly what we hoped for in a school.[/quote] Tried and true, how long have you been living in DC? Hysterical. You WOTP are hysterical. Like your schools have been FOREVER... :twisted: [/quote] I'm not that poster, I'm a np who has lived in the District for 21 years, married to a guy who's lived here since he was born in ward 3 in 1970. Several ward 3 schools have been strong for day least 40 years. Probably longer but we can't speak to that from [i]our direct experience[/i]. This fact is always inconvenient for newcomers who prattle on about wotp schools "turning," whatever the hell that means. Didn't happen that way -- sorry for upending your narrative with accuracy![/quote] Yes most WOTP schools have been good for a while, but they've been attended by majority AA students (albeit middle/high income). When more whites started attending that is when it "turned", wish people would call a spade a spade.[/quote] Name the schools you think you are discussing, please.[/quote] I will do some digging in a moment. I'm talking about 1990s. Even 2006 alone, Murch had 112 AA students that were tested in CAS and 81 White. [/quote]
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