Anonymous wrote:there was also an interview with the school principal on npr today, I look forward to watching tonight! her contract was not renewed after the year she said...good interview if you can find it
I wouldnt assume that this was representative of all DC high school's from that description. Perhaps I'm not logical though.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why not this school?
I'm looking forward to watching this documentary.
FWIW, the description reads:
Part 1 of 2. Chronicling a year at Washington Metropolitan High School in Washington, D.C., an inner-city school where, on any school day, about half of the students don't show up. Second-year principal Tanishia Williams Minor features in the documentary.
Rating: TV-PG
Without a little more context, the logical inference is that this school is representative of DC high schools, when in fact it is an aberration.

Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why not this school?
I'm looking forward to watching this documentary.
FWIW, the description reads:
Part 1 of 2. Chronicling a year at Washington Metropolitan High School in Washington, D.C., an inner-city school where, on any school day, about half of the students don't show up. Second-year principal Tanishia Williams Minor features in the documentary.
Rating: TV-PG
Without a little more context, the logical inference is that this school is representative of DC high schools, when in fact it is an aberration.
Why not allow the inference and embarrass our city education leaders?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why not this school?
I'm looking forward to watching this documentary.
FWIW, the description reads:
Part 1 of 2. Chronicling a year at Washington Metropolitan High School in Washington, D.C., an inner-city school where, on any school day, about half of the students don't show up. Second-year principal Tanishia Williams Minor features in the documentary.
Rating: TV-PG
Without a little more context, the logical inference is that this school is representative of DC high schools, when in fact it is an aberration.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why not this school?
I'm looking forward to watching this documentary.
FWIW, the description reads:
Part 1 of 2. Chronicling a year at Washington Metropolitan High School in Washington, D.C., an inner-city school where, on any school day, about half of the students don't show up. Second-year principal Tanishia Williams Minor features in the documentary.
Rating: TV-PG
Without a little more context, the logical inference is that this school is representative of DC high schools, when in fact it is an aberration.
Anonymous wrote:Why not this school?
I'm looking forward to watching this documentary.
Anonymous wrote:Why not this school?
I'm looking forward to watching this documentary.
Anonymous wrote:I had to google it, I have never even heard of this school. The scores are atrocious (8 - 10% proficiency), but if it is true that half the students don't show up on any given day, that's hardly a surprise.
I don't get why someone decided to make a documentary about this particular school. They could have picked a HS with more than 253 students, low scores, and still made a significant point about the quality of DCPS.