Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Math and reading test scores are higher in alabama than DC
I'm sure not in every city in Alabama, which is a more accurate comparison to make.
So DC as a whole is better than the worst performing cities in Alabama- someone break out the champaign
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Math and reading test scores are higher in alabama than DC
I'm sure not in every city in Alabama, which is a more accurate comparison to make.
So DC as a whole is better than the worst performing cities in Alabama- someone break out the champaign
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I say this as an eyes wide open DCPS parent - F that guy. Go back to Alabama.
Same. There is a lot I'd like to change about DCPS but that guy is just using our children to score political points with racists voters in Alabama.
Also, as someone who actually lives in DC and has some major opinions about crime in this city, it's so obvious that juvenile crime in DC is mitigated/improved by more time in and exposure to DCPS. Like it is not the kids sitting in classrooms across this city who are committing crimes. It's the ones who don't show up to school, who have disappeared from the system. If you could guarantee that every kid age 10-18 in this city was sitting in a public school classroom today with one of the city's hard-working and well-qualified teachers, you'd see a crime drop instantly.
Schools in this city have their issues, but they are not causing crime. The opposite -- they are one of our best tools for preventing it, and they don't always get the support and participation from other city institutions to do that important work.
Cosigned.
Amen. I'd add, one reason that schools are struggling is that they are expected to manage and ameliorate a whole host of other social issues over which they have no control -- crime, poverty, homelessness, instability, hunger, etc. But for many kids, school is the only place where they are supported and if they spent more time there, they'd be better off.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Math and reading test scores are higher in alabama than DC
I'm sure not in every city in Alabama, which is a more accurate comparison to make.
Anonymous wrote:I mean, school to prison pipeline is real.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I say this as an eyes wide open DCPS parent - F that guy. Go back to Alabama.
Same. There is a lot I'd like to change about DCPS but that guy is just using our children to score political points with racists voters in Alabama.
Also, as someone who actually lives in DC and has some major opinions about crime in this city, it's so obvious that juvenile crime in DC is mitigated/improved by more time in and exposure to DCPS. Like it is not the kids sitting in classrooms across this city who are committing crimes. It's the ones who don't show up to school, who have disappeared from the system. If you could guarantee that every kid age 10-18 in this city was sitting in a public school classroom today with one of the city's hard-working and well-qualified teachers, you'd see a crime drop instantly.
Schools in this city have their issues, but they are not causing crime. The opposite -- they are one of our best tools for preventing it, and they don't always get the support and participation from other city institutions to do that important work.
Cosigned.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I say this as an eyes wide open DCPS parent - F that guy. Go back to Alabama.
Same. There is a lot I'd like to change about DCPS but that guy is just using our children to score political points with racists voters in Alabama.
Also, as someone who actually lives in DC and has some major opinions about crime in this city, it's so obvious that juvenile crime in DC is mitigated/improved by more time in and exposure to DCPS. Like it is not the kids sitting in classrooms across this city who are committing crimes. It's the ones who don't show up to school, who have disappeared from the system. If you could guarantee that every kid age 10-18 in this city was sitting in a public school classroom today with one of the city's hard-working and well-qualified teachers, you'd see a crime drop instantly.
Schools in this city have their issues, but they are not causing crime. The opposite -- they are one of our best tools for preventing it, and they don't always get the support and participation from other city institutions to do that important work.
Anonymous wrote:I say this as an eyes wide open DCPS parent - F that guy. Go back to Alabama.
Anonymous wrote:Math and reading test scores are higher in alabama than DC