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DC Public and Public Charter Schools
Reply to "A Note from a Public School Mom of Three & a Candidate's Wife"
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[quote=jsteele]NEIGHBORHOOD PREFERENCE INFO: Okay, I just returned form a meet and greet with John Settles. He had been forewarned about this issue and actually offered to set up a conference call with our users. If anyone is interested in that, let me know. But, for the time being I told hims simple post here (such as I'm posting now) is probably sufficient. First, unbeknownst to me, David Grosso has already introduced legislation to allow neighborhood preference. The bill has gone nowhere, but you can see the text here: http://dcclims1.dccouncil.us/images/00001/20130410125256.pdf This bill is completely unacceptable to me. It allows a neighborhood preference for 20% of the students, but the preference doesn't apply to pre-K (this seems like a strange limitation to me). Settles said that this bill is the basis of his position. However, he further said that he believes this should only be applied to situations in which the local DCPS school has been closed and a charter opened in its building. I am not aware of examples that would meet that qualification. He repeatedly stressed that he does not see charter schools as a replacement for local DCPS schools and that the focus needs to be on creating strong local DCPS schools in every neighborhood. Having had several conversations about education with Settles, I see his education priorities like this: 1) Getting DCPS and Charters to cooperate in an organized manner so that they are partners not competitors; 2) Fixing DCPS internal structures to increase accountability and improve outputs; 3) Creating great neighborhood schools (this might even be number 2 instead of 3); .. .. .. Way, way down... x) Neighborhood preference for charter schools. [/quote]
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