jsteele wrote:Anonymous wrote:jsteele wrote:Aaron Weiner of the Washington City Paper has an article looking at winners and losers in the recent DME school boundary process:
http://www.washingtoncitypaper.com/blogs/housingcomplex/2014/08/27/zone-defense/
In response to a suggestion that some families hurt by the new school boundaries might move, DCPS Chancellor Kaya Henderson is quoted as saying:
"Even those who decide to leave, you know, this city is getting 1,000 new residents a month," she says. "And these residents will have babies."
This is outrageous. While Henderson is factually correct, retention of families that have invested in DCPS should be one of her top priorities. If her school system is causing people to leave the District, she is failing at her job. This raises a serious question as to whether Henderson is fit for the position she holds. Months ago, she publicly told a Council hearing that DCPS does not do middle schools well and suggested that maybe middle schools should be turned over to the charter sector. Now, she prefers babies over actual DCPS students. Is there anyone she actually wants to educate or is her goal to dismantle DCPS?
No school system can satisfy everyone. And no set of changes like this can satisfy everyone. You have people with choice of where to live who lose from the DME proposal, people with choice of where to live who benefit, and of course the many people with less choice whose interests still matter. I mean ultimately "You gotta do what I like cause I can MOVE" is simply not something that should stop an otherwise good plan. Its like the folks on the Hill constantly whining how their problems are hurting the Distict, even as the gentrification frontier on the Hill advances block by block by block. That does not mean their problems should not be addressed - just that there is no tax base reason for it to be urgent.
Please let me know what problems you find in the city so that I can advocate that they be ignored. I'm sure your problems are important to you, but, hey, can't satisfy everyone.
Anonymous wrote:jsteele wrote:Aaron Weiner of the Washington City Paper has an article looking at winners and losers in the recent DME school boundary process:
http://www.washingtoncitypaper.com/blogs/housingcomplex/2014/08/27/zone-defense/
In response to a suggestion that some families hurt by the new school boundaries might move, DCPS Chancellor Kaya Henderson is quoted as saying:
"Even those who decide to leave, you know, this city is getting 1,000 new residents a month," she says. "And these residents will have babies."
This is outrageous. While Henderson is factually correct, retention of families that have invested in DCPS should be one of her top priorities. If her school system is causing people to leave the District, she is failing at her job. This raises a serious question as to whether Henderson is fit for the position she holds. Months ago, she publicly told a Council hearing that DCPS does not do middle schools well and suggested that maybe middle schools should be turned over to the charter sector. Now, she prefers babies over actual DCPS students. Is there anyone she actually wants to educate or is her goal to dismantle DCPS?
No school system can satisfy everyone. And no set of changes like this can satisfy everyone. You have people with choice of where to live who lose from the DME proposal, people with choice of where to live who benefit, and of course the many people with less choice whose interests still matter. I mean ultimately "You gotta do what I like cause I can MOVE" is simply not something that should stop an otherwise good plan. Its like the folks on the Hill constantly whining how their problems are hurting the Distict, even as the gentrification frontier on the Hill advances block by block by block. That does not mean their problems should not be addressed - just that there is no tax base reason for it to be urgent.
jsteele wrote:Aaron Weiner of the Washington City Paper has an article looking at winners and losers in the recent DME school boundary process:
http://www.washingtoncitypaper.com/blogs/housingcomplex/2014/08/27/zone-defense/
In response to a suggestion that some families hurt by the new school boundaries might move, DCPS Chancellor Kaya Henderson is quoted as saying:
"Even those who decide to leave, you know, this city is getting 1,000 new residents a month," she says. "And these residents will have babies."
This is outrageous. While Henderson is factually correct, retention of families that have invested in DCPS should be one of her top priorities. If her school system is causing people to leave the District, she is failing at her job. This raises a serious question as to whether Henderson is fit for the position she holds. Months ago, she publicly told a Council hearing that DCPS does not do middle schools well and suggested that maybe middle schools should be turned over to the charter sector. Now, she prefers babies over actual DCPS students. Is there anyone she actually wants to educate or is her goal to dismantle DCPS?
Anonymous wrote:jsteele wrote:Aaron Weiner of the Washington City Paper has an article looking at winners and losers in the recent DME school boundary process:
http://www.washingtoncitypaper.com/blogs/housingcomplex/2014/08/27/zone-defense/
In response to a suggestion that some families hurt by the new school boundaries might move, DCPS Chancellor Kaya Henderson is quoted as saying:
"Even those who decide to leave, you know, this city is getting 1,000 new residents a month," she says. "And these residents will have babies."
This is outrageous. While Henderson is factually correct, retention of families that have invested in DCPS should be one of her top priorities. If her school system is causing people to leave the District, she is failing at her job. This raises a serious question as to whether Henderson is fit for the position she holds. Months ago, she publicly told a Council hearing that DCPS does not do middle schools well and suggested that maybe middle schools should be turned over to the charter sector. Now, she prefers babies over actual DCPS students. Is there anyone she actually wants to educate or is her goal to dismantle DCPS?
No school system can satisfy everyone. And no set of changes like this can satisfy everyone. You have people with choice of where to live who lose from the DME proposal, people with choice of where to live who benefit, and of course the many people with less choice whose interests still matter. I mean ultimately "You gotta do what I like cause I can MOVE" is simply not something that should stop an otherwise good plan. Its like the folks on the Hill constantly whining how their problems are hurting the Distict, even as the gentrification frontier on the Hill advances block by block by block. That does not mean their problems should not be addressed - just that there is no tax base reason for it to be urgent.
jsteele wrote:Aaron Weiner of the Washington City Paper has an article looking at winners and losers in the recent DME school boundary process:
http://www.washingtoncitypaper.com/blogs/housingcomplex/2014/08/27/zone-defense/
In response to a suggestion that some families hurt by the new school boundaries might move, DCPS Chancellor Kaya Henderson is quoted as saying:
"Even those who decide to leave, you know, this city is getting 1,000 new residents a month," she says. "And these residents will have babies."
This is outrageous. While Henderson is factually correct, retention of families that have invested in DCPS should be one of her top priorities. If her school system is causing people to leave the District, she is failing at her job. This raises a serious question as to whether Henderson is fit for the position she holds. Months ago, she publicly told a Council hearing that DCPS does not do middle schools well and suggested that maybe middle schools should be turned over to the charter sector. Now, she prefers babies over actual DCPS students. Is there anyone she actually wants to educate or is her goal to dismantle DCPS?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:jsteele wrote:Aaron Weiner of the Washington City Paper has an article looking at winners and losers in the recent DME school boundary process:
http://www.washingtoncitypaper.com/blogs/housingcomplex/2014/08/27/zone-defense/
In response to a suggestion that some families hurt by the new school boundaries might move, DCPS Chancellor Kaya Henderson is quoted as saying:
"Even those who decide to leave, you know, this city is getting 1,000 new residents a month," she says. "And these residents will have babies."
This is outrageous. While Henderson is factually correct, retention of families that have invested in DCPS should be one of her top priorities. If her school system is causing people to leave the District, she is failing at her job. This raises a serious question as to whether Henderson is fit for the position she holds. Months ago, she publicly told a Council hearing that DCPS does not do middle schools well and suggested that maybe middle schools should be turned over to the charter sector. Now, she prefers babies over actual DCPS students. Is there anyone she actually wants to educate or is her goal to dismantle DCPS?
Depends on what her job really is. If it's to promote charters and serve the interests of hordes of newcomers who aren't as fussy as people currently here, then she's doing a fine job.
Are you kidding? One of the things can gave impetus to the whole boundary project was new residents, who settled in neighborhoods because they were a good value and convenient to urban "vibrancy" but without any thought to the public schools, are now focused on schools. Originally, they didn't know whether they would have kids, or just figured they'd move. Now they don't want to move or can't afford to. But rather than working and investing sweat equity in their local schools, they want access now to OOB schools that are already good.
Anonymous wrote:jsteele wrote:Aaron Weiner of the Washington City Paper has an article looking at winners and losers in the recent DME school boundary process:
http://www.washingtoncitypaper.com/blogs/housingcomplex/2014/08/27/zone-defense/
In response to a suggestion that some families hurt by the new school boundaries might move, DCPS Chancellor Kaya Henderson is quoted as saying:
"Even those who decide to leave, you know, this city is getting 1,000 new residents a month," she says. "And these residents will have babies."
This is outrageous. While Henderson is factually correct, retention of families that have invested in DCPS should be one of her top priorities. If her school system is causing people to leave the District, she is failing at her job. This raises a serious question as to whether Henderson is fit for the position she holds. Months ago, she publicly told a Council hearing that DCPS does not do middle schools well and suggested that maybe middle schools should be turned over to the charter sector. Now, she prefers babies over actual DCPS students. Is there anyone she actually wants to educate or is her goal to dismantle DCPS?
Depends on what her job really is. If it's to promote charters and serve the interests of hordes of newcomers who aren't as fussy as people currently here, then she's doing a fine job.
jsteele wrote:Aaron Weiner of the Washington City Paper has an article looking at winners and losers in the recent DME school boundary process:
http://www.washingtoncitypaper.com/blogs/housingcomplex/2014/08/27/zone-defense/
In response to a suggestion that some families hurt by the new school boundaries might move, DCPS Chancellor Kaya Henderson is quoted as saying:
"Even those who decide to leave, you know, this city is getting 1,000 new residents a month," she says. "And these residents will have babies."
This is outrageous. While Henderson is factually correct, retention of families that have invested in DCPS should be one of her top priorities. If her school system is causing people to leave the District, she is failing at her job. This raises a serious question as to whether Henderson is fit for the position she holds. Months ago, she publicly told a Council hearing that DCPS does not do middle schools well and suggested that maybe middle schools should be turned over to the charter sector. Now, she prefers babies over actual DCPS students. Is there anyone she actually wants to educate or is her goal to dismantle DCPS?
Anonymous wrote:Our school leaders don't deal in subtleties. That would be a sign of intelligence and professionalism. Yes, a boundary and school assignment overhaul would have people adversely impacted no matter what. It is how you mitigate that ( good planning, full budgeting, confidence-inspiring hiring and programming ) that makes the difference. They are simply a "my way or the highway" sort of crowd and it isn't serving the city well.
I say this as someone not personally affected one way or another by the changes.