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DC Public and Public Charter Schools
Reply to "Is walls ever bringing back the test for admissions?"
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]Yes, that problem played into the Mayor's decision to nix the Walls test two years ago, or so she claimed. What a misguided approach to leveling the playing field. The obvious solution is for the District to pay to level the playing field. ES GT programs could be introduced in Title 1 schools. DCPS could make sure that all applicants have a chance to learn the requisite math. They pour money into renovating mostly empty MS buildings instead, e.g. Jefferson Academy ($60 million, still more than half empty five years later). NYC provides the prep at free test prep centers for MS and HS students scattered around each of its four boroughs. Kids can freely pop into the centers for test prep after school and on weekends to supplement the math instruction they get at school. In NYC, kids who want to prep for HS magnet tests are given thick learning packets and support to learn independently on Khan Academy. Most NYC middle schools have a computer lab where students are encouraged to work on academics after school, under the watchful eye of staff with tutors on hand. There are ways and ways to provide the prep some low SES kids will need to score high enough on the exam to test into academic magnets. DCPS bothers with none of them. Eliminating the Walls test and standardized test requirement on the application was much cheaper and easier. [/quote] I'm all for standardized tests and free test prep, but New York has been dealing with the same issues as DC because all of that test prep is still not getting them a population that can pass the entrance tests for specialized high schools that looks anything like their overall population. The difference is that they have a parent and alumni population that's been more able to push back again killing the exam schools.[/quote] You could also do a test and then sort by school or ward of residence. Seems more transparent than the GPA/interview as long as you can get enough interested test takers across the city.[/quote] Yes. That's what Chicago does - by zip code. There are a few different options. I think DC picked one of the worst. But there isn't one that removes this from being a contentious political issue. [/quote]
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