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DC Public and Public Charter Schools
Reply to "CAPE Score Comparison for Caucasian students at Schools with Spanish Immersion"
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]Strongly disagree and we have lived EotP for 20 years. If you want to build a strong urban neighborhood school system you need to prioritize attracting residents of a school’s catchment area to the program, like the burbs do. All the crazy school commutes in DC are a real drag, as is insufficient middle school challenge for most middle class students. Weak partial language immersion options in DCPS after ES outside Adams are another losing proposition. [/quote] If DCPS wanted more buy in from parents east of the park (I’m one of them) they would need to bring back test in advanced classes for high achieving students. [b]Middle school achievement gap is huge and middle school matters a LOT to get ready for high school, especially in math. Mixing 6th grade kids above grade level with kids two grade levels behind in o ce class is a disservice for all. [/b]But DC is focused only on equity or at least the appearance of it. They are closing the gap by lowering the ceiling.[/quote] To be fair, even DCPS tacitly concedes this by allowing straightforward, test-in math tracking in MS. I think it's a shame they don't do anything in upper ES, because it really disadvantages kids whose parents can't work with them at home or afford to send them to mathnasium, etc so that they are ready for the highest math option in 6th grade.[/quote] Can you elaborate on this more, please? We’re at a Hardy feeder and my DC is a good student and gets good grades in math, but firmly doesn’t know anything that hasn’t already been introduced in class. And would kill me if I tried to get them to do any supplementation. When I was a kid, good grades were enough to get on the advanced math track. Is that not the case anymore? Do kids need to be above grade level in elementary to be eligible for advanced math in sixth?[/quote] https://www.hardyms.org/apps/pages/index.jsp?uREC_ID=243077&type=d&termREC_ID=&pREC_ID=573783[/quote] I love that Hardy lays it out this straightforwardly. Basically, if your kid isn't ahead going into 6th, they have to teach themselves a lot of math during 6th or summer between 6th & 7th to qualify for Algebra. It's possible, especially for a good math student, but it requires them to be entirely self-motivated and good at learn by computer. 6th grade is also a hard year socially, etc for a lot of kids, so piling on in that year is dumb compared to 5th grade, which is a coasting year for many students who remain at DCPSes. DCPS should start some of the acceleration in 2nd or 3rd grade and build up naturally rather than compressing it into 6th grade. But they don't. [b]Because "equity"[/b]. Only it's actually *less* equitable, because so many UMC families supplement knowing that this is coming. [/quote] Why do you suppose that "equity" is the reason for this approach? I'd assume that the reason is funding and needing to add another teacher or class section but IDK. [/quote]
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