Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Janney and Murch drew higher and higher numbers of IB students because those schools had staff and active families that inspired greater confidence in DCPS. Hearst has not been able to pull it off, for whatever reason.
Hearst also includes some apartment buildings, by the way, not all million-dollar houses. Now, for some crazy reason, DCPS is renovating Hearst (and not Murch, which has many more students and is overdue) and also threatening choice sets that would put the Hearst neighborhood out of the Deal/Wilson feeder pattern. Then you are going to see a brand new Hearst building with ZERO IB families. The proposed boundary shift is yet another mindf**K from DC government: it rezones families who live only 2-3 blocks from Murch to Hearst which is a mile away. This looks like a plan to try and revive Hardy by forced rezoning to capture more IB, but it isn't going to fly because the IB families who came back to DCPS for Murch and Deal will not go for lower-quality schools that are further away (Hearst and Hardy).
Get over yourself. In no scenario does Hearst go to Hardy and the whole idea of choice sets is DOA, this post is a little over the top in its claims. Let's be honest in our discussions on this board.
Anonymous wrote:Janney and Murch drew higher and higher numbers of IB students because those schools had staff and active families that inspired greater confidence in DCPS. Hearst has not been able to pull it off, for whatever reason.
Hearst also includes some apartment buildings, by the way, not all million-dollar houses. Now, for some crazy reason, DCPS is renovating Hearst (and not Murch, which has many more students and is overdue) and also threatening choice sets that would put the Hearst neighborhood out of the Deal/Wilson feeder pattern. Then you are going to see a brand new Hearst building with ZERO IB families. The proposed boundary shift is yet another mindf**K from DC government: it rezones families who live only 2-3 blocks from Murch to Hearst which is a mile away. This looks like a plan to try and revive Hardy by forced rezoning to capture more IB, but it isn't going to fly because the IB families who came back to DCPS for Murch and Deal will not go for lower-quality schools that are further away (Hearst and Hardy).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If they do shift Murch's boundary north, Hearst is likely to pick up more IB students.
Perhaps but some families bought in the neighborhood were making sure they were inbounds for Murch and not Hearst so I would not expect some of these families to just say "oh well" and send their kids to Hearst. We bought our house to be able to walk to Murch a solid school with international diversity and a strong sense of community.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If they do shift Murch's boundary north, Hearst is likely to pick up more IB students.
Perhaps but some families bought in the neighborhood were making sure they were inbounds for Murch and not Hearst so I would not expect some of these families to just say "oh well" and send their kids to Hearst. We bought our house to be able to walk to Murch a solid school with international diversity and a strong sense of community.
Anonymous wrote:If they do shift Murch's boundary north, Hearst is likely to pick up more IB students.
Anonymous wrote:Got it. But 18% is really low compared to the nearby schools (whose families also live in multi-million dollar homes). Eaton has 36%-- also low but double Hearst. And Janney 92%!
And I see from the new proposed borders that the boundary is not expanding that much for Hearst in the proposal. Just seems interesting and I was wondering if anyone had any insight.
Anonymous wrote:Any thoughts on why Hearst has such a low percentage of in-boundary students (18%).
I'm guessing a lot of kids in that area go to private school but even so 18% seems really low!