Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: Meanwhile, because a lame bus company once employed a drunk driver to drive around ES students, now the students at Walls cannot easily leave the building. So forget the whole "without walls" thing.
What a weird, uniformed thing to say. So far THIS school year my kids who are current students at Walls have:
- walked with their French class to a bakery for croissants
- walked with their Latin class to the West End library
- spent 2 days on the Mall doing an experiential cross-functional scavenger hunt with their grade
- gone with their history class to polling station for 18 year olds in their class to vote
- participated in a ceremony at the White House with fellow students
- eaten lunch at Western Market dozens of times
- run to the Memorials for PE more times than they can count
So much for forgetting the whole "without walls" thing....
Anonymous wrote: Meanwhile, because a lame bus company once employed a drunk driver to drive around ES students, now the students at Walls cannot easily leave the building. So forget the whole "without walls" thing.
Anonymous wrote:The recent Walls Open House was absurdly crowded. On the recent virtual OH, the presenter said they had failed to close registration at the cap of 400 families and let like 600 families register. Yay DCPS.
I agree with PP that the teachers must misunderstand the purpose of an OH since all most of them just said, "We have these classes" (just like all other DCPS high schools...).
My DD liked the school, but I have to say that my early impression of the admin and some teachers is weak (physics/anatomy teacher excepted). They seem to pitch that it's a great school because it's students score relatively well on standardized tests and get into decent colleges, but then of course they do because that's built into the students they start with. They need to spend more effort explaining what Walls does to provide a distinctive educational opportunity for its students rather than just crowing about the students.
Meanwhile, because a lame bus company once employed a drunk driver to drive around ES students, now the students at Walls cannot easily leave the building. So forget the whole "without walls" thing.
Anonymous wrote:The open house last year was one of the reasons I didn't really want my kid going there.
To keep it brief, the Walls open house parent vibe was 'entitlement.'
The Banneker open house vibe was 'work.'
I'm sure it would've been fine, our now-high schooler does great interpersonally, on tests, etc., but I'm a lot more at ease dealing with parents who haven't gone to college than ones who went to Oxford.
Just my personal biases, so take it with a grain of salt.
Anonymous wrote:Did anyone attend the Walls open house on Saturday? I attended with my kid but have some friends who are planning to go to the December one and wanted to pass on if any parent or kids had different experiences.