Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm watching the DC Council Hearing on the education related agencies (UDC, DME-Deputy Mayor for Education, State Board of Education, DC PCSB, etc). The testimony from the EmpowerEd group is that the DME must be focused on school integration as a priority and push the necessary school boundary changes that lead to integration goals even if there is pushback.
What are your thoughts? I have lots of priorities for education like more gifted programs, improved middle school options, better curriculum, support to keep teachers in the profession, etc but changing school boundaries for the purposes of integration isn't high on the list.
What does “more” integration even mean in DC. It’s one of the most integrated districts in the country
Anonymous wrote:Many Charters are super integrated. Even the fancy ones -- BASIS, DCI and Latin fit the actual definition of integrated (no one race more than 70 percent of the population).
Other charters are not integrated but at serving their low-income populations better than the DCPS schools (like DC Prep getting everyone into college).
DCPS schools in gentrifying neighborhoods are sometimes integrated and there is an opportunity here to be a model. Like I feel Garrison actually serves all demographics well.
Other DCPS schools are not integrated because the housing is segregated. Do people really want to run busses between Ward 3 and EOTR or something? This sounds like a mess.
Anonymous wrote:I'm watching the DC Council Hearing on the education related agencies (UDC, DME-Deputy Mayor for Education, State Board of Education, DC PCSB, etc). The testimony from the EmpowerEd group is that the DME must be focused on school integration as a priority and push the necessary school boundary changes that lead to integration goals even if there is pushback.
What are your thoughts? I have lots of priorities for education like more gifted programs, improved middle school options, better curriculum, support to keep teachers in the profession, etc but changing school boundaries for the purposes of integration isn't high on the list.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Empower always says that. I think they add a lot of value with their data dashboard and highlighting which schools are overperforming their demographics. But the pushback is too much for DME/OSSE.
Having said that, I would suggest that the city not horrifically botch the rollout of future ideas like their stupid Maury/Miner combination. And if they would actually address the very real problems of certain schools then integration would likely increase on its own.
Just to clarify: The data dashboards are from EmpowerK12. OP is referring to EmpowerEd, an advocacy organization for diverse schools. (Then there's Empower DC, which works on environmental and economic justice. It's definitely confusing.)
Anonymous wrote:Empower always says that. I think they add a lot of value with their data dashboard and highlighting which schools are overperforming their demographics. But the pushback is too much for DME/OSSE.
Having said that, I would suggest that the city not horrifically botch the rollout of future ideas like their stupid Maury/Miner combination. And if they would actually address the very real problems of certain schools then integration would likely increase on its own.