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DC Public and Public Charter Schools
Reply to "Payne elementary "
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]No, schools don't turn around quickly -that's pie in the sky thinking. It took Brent a decade to become majority in-boundary and Maury still doesn't have lots of high SES kids in the upper grades. Ludlow-Taylor actually lost most of its in-boundary families under Principal Cobbs, who stuck around for seven long years. I see a few gentrifiers toughing things out at Payne in K in the fall, and maybe 1st grade the year after, with few (or no) high SES families in the upper grades for another eight or nine years. Can you wait that long, OP?[/quote]I seriously doubt it will take 10 years. Why? Because there aren't enough charter seats available, and not enough affordable inventory in the areas in which former Hill residents like to purchase. [/quote]It has taken longer than that to turn around Garrison around. there will always be plenty of inventory in the 'burbs...[/quote]+100. I find that relative newcomers to the city, and parents of toddlers who haven't been involved in DCPS schools yet, tend to dramatically underestimate what it takes to make a school gentrifier friendly past the early childhood years. There are boatloads of charter seats available, just not at schools that aren't majority FARMs.[/quote]I find that many of the "experienced" people underestimate how different the current situation is than it was just a couple years ago. The demand for seats at the desirable schools exceeds the number available by more than it ever has. If those families that don't get the preferred OOB seats in the lottery start using the other schools in high enough numbers there's no guarantee the schools will change but it is a opportunity those schools haven't seen before. I don't think anyone knows the answer but comparing it to the challenges flipping Brent or Maury isn't completely valid. I'm not underestimating the challenge but I don't think you are acknowledging that the current dynamics are different. [/quote] Brent and Maury have affluent catchment areas and a dearth of public housing, so "flipping" them was relatively easy. Ludlow Taylor is in a similar position, albeit the old guard was able to hang on a little longer. Payne, JO Wilson, Tyler, Amidon and Minor are not as ripe for the picking. So yes, the current dynamicsis different, but the challenge of assembling a cohort remains the same. The fulcrum for "flipping" Payne is in a different and more difficult place.[/quote]
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