Anonymous wrote:I resisted this way of thinking for a while, but if you look at the data, UMC do as well in DCPS as they do anywhere. So it’s a bit of a myth. It all has to do with preferences. If you believe that a more homogeneously “high acheiving” school is what you want, that’s not DCPS mostly. If you like the suburbs, big outdoor spaces, also not DCPS. But for many of us, DCPS fits because we like the city, don’t want to live in the suburbs, and have found year by year that our kids are doing well.
Anonymous wrote:I resisted this way of thinking for a while, but if you look at the data, UMC do as well in DCPS as they do anywhere. So it’s a bit of a myth. It all has to do with preferences. If you believe that a more homogeneously “high acheiving” school is what you want, that’s not DCPS mostly. If you like the suburbs, big outdoor spaces, also not DCPS. But for many of us, DCPS fits because we like the city, don’t want to live in the suburbs, and have found year by year that our kids are doing well.
Anonymous wrote:MCPS is a dumpster fire for special ed. After the pandemic it became full on 5 alarmer. There is really only on public school district in the greater metro region - and it certainly isn’t MCPS.
I don't understand your last sentence. Can you restate it?Anonymous wrote:MCPS is a dumpster fire for special ed. After the pandemic it became full on 5 alarmer. There is really only on public school district in the greater metro region - and it certainly isn’t MCPS.