Anonymous wrote:I’d whittle down by teacher and principal turnover (lower is better), percentage of neighborhood kids attending (higher is better), and enrollment growth rate
Anonymous wrote:I’d whittle down by teacher and principal turnover (lower is better), percentage of neighborhood kids attending (higher is better), and enrollment growth rate
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here - sorry folks, I should have stuck with my initial instinct and not posted any school names, as we've immediately veered into "this one's best, don't do this one" which is not at all the point of this thread. I've reported the last four posts (two of which are mine) and asked Jeff to delete them so we can get back on track.
The question here is a process one:
When you have 24 schools on your potential list, how can you narrow when you've already considered commute, feeders, and baseline academics? I can't go to 24 open houses!
And also generally: How do DCPS schools differ besides student body/test scores, feeder, and location? Are they very similar across the board in other respects?
Anonymous wrote:OP here - sorry folks, I should have stuck with my initial instinct and not posted any school names, as we've immediately veered into "this one's best, don't do this one" which is not at all the point of this thread. I've reported the last four posts (two of which are mine) and asked Jeff to delete them so we can get back on track.
The question here is a process one:
When you have 24 schools on your potential list, how can you narrow when you've already considered commute, feeders, and baseline academics? I can't go to 24 open houses!
Anonymous wrote:Have you weighed likelihood of getting in via lottery? Or will you move?
(TBH: maybe you said you would move in your original post but it was quite long.)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Obviously, they have very different kids attending, are in different locations, have different feeders, and have very different test scores, all of which matter and all of which you can figure out easily online.
Outside of those very googleable facts - how much do schools really differ? Are they all:
Using the same curriculum?
Providing the same amount of recess?
Have roughly the same technology policies (1:1 for devices in the classroom after 3rd grade)?
For context: I'm starting the process of looking for a new school for my K student - I don't think their current school will work well for upper elementary school. I've created a long list of potential options based on commute times and eliminating those without a cohort of on/above grade level performers. My list is too long to go to that many open houses - 24 schools. I'm wondering if it makes sense to just eliminate any DCPS school that's in, let's say, the bottom 50% for commute of the schools on my list, assuming I've got other DCPS schools on my list with similar test scores, similar lottery chances, and a similarly crappy feeder. It's unlikely that one of them is a diamond in the rough for some weird reason I wouldn't be able to figure out without getting inside the building?
Or if people have another suggestion on ways to get this list down without visiting, I'm open to it. That's too many to even visit tables for at EdFest.
Might be helpful to post the schools you're most curious about in this thread and ask for only people with direct experience to weigh in.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Obviously, they have very different kids attending, are in different locations, have different feeders, and have very different test scores, all of which matter and all of which you can figure out easily online.
Outside of those very googleable facts - how much do schools really differ? Are they all:
Using the same curriculum?
Providing the same amount of recess?
Have roughly the same technology policies (1:1 for devices in the classroom after 3rd grade)?
For context: I'm starting the process of looking for a new school for my K student - I don't think their current school will work well for upper elementary school. I've created a long list of potential options based on commute times and eliminating those without a cohort of on/above grade level performers. My list is too long to go to that many open houses - 24 schools. I'm wondering if it makes sense to just eliminate any DCPS school that's in, let's say, the bottom 50% for commute of the schools on my list, assuming I've got other DCPS schools on my list with similar test scores, similar lottery chances, and a similarly crappy feeder. It's unlikely that one of them is a diamond in the rough for some weird reason I wouldn't be able to figure out without getting inside the building?
Or if people have another suggestion on ways to get this list down without visiting, I'm open to it. That's too many to even visit tables for at EdFest.
Our family has experience at two different DCPS elementary schools and they are different. Reading is the same at both schools (fundations etc). Math is Eureka at both but the better one has more options for upward differentiation. Social studies, science and writing are dramatically better and way less screen time during the day.
24 schools is a lot! But I would highly recommend going to as many open houses as you can, looking at student work, and asking the principal "what do you offer that my current school doesn't." They know.
Anonymous wrote:Obviously, they have very different kids attending, are in different locations, have different feeders, and have very different test scores, all of which matter and all of which you can figure out easily online.
Outside of those very googleable facts - how much do schools really differ? Are they all:
Using the same curriculum?
Providing the same amount of recess?
Have roughly the same technology policies (1:1 for devices in the classroom after 3rd grade)?
For context: I'm starting the process of looking for a new school for my K student - I don't think their current school will work well for upper elementary school. I've created a long list of potential options based on commute times and eliminating those without a cohort of on/above grade level performers. My list is too long to go to that many open houses - 24 schools. I'm wondering if it makes sense to just eliminate any DCPS school that's in, let's say, the bottom 50% for commute of the schools on my list, assuming I've got other DCPS schools on my list with similar test scores, similar lottery chances, and a similarly crappy feeder. It's unlikely that one of them is a diamond in the rough for some weird reason I wouldn't be able to figure out without getting inside the building?
Or if people have another suggestion on ways to get this list down without visiting, I'm open to it. That's too many to even visit tables for at EdFest.
Anonymous wrote:Obviously, they have very different kids attending, are in different locations, have different feeders, and have very different test scores, all of which matter and all of which you can figure out easily online.
Outside of those very googleable facts - how much do schools really differ? Are they all:
Using the same curriculum?
Providing the same amount of recess?
Have roughly the same technology policies (1:1 for devices in the classroom after 3rd grade)?
For context: I'm starting the process of looking for a new school for my K student - I don't think their current school will work well for upper elementary school. I've created a long list of potential options based on commute times and eliminating those without a cohort of on/above grade level performers. My list is too long to go to that many open houses - 24 schools. I'm wondering if it makes sense to just eliminate any DCPS school that's in, let's say, the bottom 50% for commute of the schools on my list, assuming I've got other DCPS schools on my list with similar test scores, similar lottery chances, and a similarly crappy feeder. It's unlikely that one of them is a diamond in the rough for some weird reason I wouldn't be able to figure out without getting inside the building?
Or if people have another suggestion on ways to get this list down without visiting, I'm open to it. That's too many to even visit tables for at EdFest.