Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Yes, they are.
Lafayette has a stronger principal situation though, and open classrooms which a lot of people dislike.
Also, Lafayette has a more stable student population, with fewer kids leaving in older grades and fewer international kids from embassies moving in and out.
Can someone please explain why the principal situation at Murch is weaker? Went to an open house at Murch this morning and really liked the principal. Thanks!
Murch parent here, and while I don't claim to know all the ins and outs of the principal situation, I think the basic deal is that she isn't very engaged with parents and can be non-responsive--not that she literally ignores people as much as that she isn't particularly helpful or sympathetic when approached by parents with individual issues. And there was a bit of a class-assignment SNAFU at the beginning of this school year that was upsetting to a subset of parents.
That said (and even as the recipient of a sort of condescending and non-responsive e-mail from Ms. Ellis when we e-mailed her with a question/concern), the school is well-run, and I don't have any sense of pervasive dislike among the parents or the teachers. She really isn't a part of your day-to-day life--true of most principals, I think--unless you have a specific issue that you need to elevate. Also, the AP is very good, and I think she's really the first line of administration when you have an issue to discuss.
I think she's basically fine. She has only been around a few years (she was hired by Rhee), and I don't know how much longer she has until retirement; I imagine she's not in this for the super-long haul.
I think the Lafayette principal has been at the school forever; given the school's success, I think she gets a lot of credit and has a lot of loyalty among parents.