Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
OP forgot to include the petition to Help Save the Wilson High School Budget:
http://www.gopetition.com/petitions/save-wilson-high-school.html
Please help support DC's more diverse and successful high school, and THE ONE THAT INCLUDES THE HIGHEST NUMBER OF AT-RISK STUDENTS.
I'm not the OP, but I am one of the people who signed on to and was part of the effort to draft the at-risk funds petition. The PP is correct that it was started prior to the budgets coming out. We didn't know anything about Wilson's budget getting cut. What we did know was that our kids go to some of the schools with the lowest per at-risk student amounts. While I very much support Wilson and do not want their funding to be cut, I also would remind the quoted PP that not everyone's children go to or have any chance of going to Wilson. The schools that they attend now and will attend in the future do not deserve to have their budgets cut either.
Our ultimate goal was to ask the Chancellor to restore the "money follows student" principle of the at risk money, and then, when she basically declared that that was happening, to thank her for making that decision and encourage her, DCPS and Council to keep making decisions that way.
What seems to be a common theme with both petitions is that DCPS and/ or the Mayor is doing something really strange with next year's budget. Perhaps we need a new, joint petition asking for an independent, external and ongoing audit of the school system budget?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
OP forgot to include the petition to Help Save the Wilson High School Budget:
http://www.gopetition.com/petitions/save-wilson-high-school.html
Please help support DC's more diverse and successful high school, and THE ONE THAT INCLUDES THE HIGHEST NUMBER OF AT-RISK STUDENTS.
I'm not the OP, but I am one of the people who signed on to and was part of the effort to draft the at-risk funds petition. The PP is correct that it was started prior to the budgets coming out. We didn't know anything about Wilson's budget getting cut. What we did know was that our kids go to some of the schools with the lowest per at-risk student amounts. While I very much support Wilson and do not want their funding to be cut, I also would remind the quoted PP that not everyone's children go to or have any chance of going to Wilson. The schools that they attend now and will attend in the future do not deserve to have their budgets cut either.
Our ultimate goal was to ask the Chancellor to restore the "money follows student" principle of the at risk money, and then, when she basically declared that that was happening, to thank her for making that decision and encourage her, DCPS and Council to keep making decisions that way.
jsteele wrote:Anonymous wrote:Spend the money elsewhere and stop the constant flood of students and money to Tenleytown.
Design a school system that is more than one feeder pattern.
Do you seriously believe that the way to improve the school system is by making its best comprehensive high school worse? That is a very short-sighted approach that could easily put the entire system into a tail spin at the end of which none of the schools are very good. Your goal of a better designed school system would be met better by raising the level of other schools rather than lowering Wilson's.
Anonymous wrote:
OP forgot to include the petition to Help Save the Wilson High School Budget:
http://www.gopetition.com/petitions/save-wilson-high-school.html
Please help support DC's more diverse and successful high school, and THE ONE THAT INCLUDES THE HIGHEST NUMBER OF AT-RISK STUDENTS.
Anonymous wrote:I don't understand the confusion. Here is the summary of the 3 things they ask for:
1. Affirm the commitment to additional funding for at-risk students and expand the benefit to alternative schools,
2. Work with schools to refine the funding process to ensure effective use of funds through greater flexibility, and
3. Provide stability for schools by preventing the loss of significant amounts of per-pupil funding this year as result of evolving budget priorities.
Alternative schools like Washington Met and Luke C Moore didn't qualify for at-risk funds as the petition states.
Anonymous wrote:Spend the money elsewhere and stop the constant flood of students and money to Tenleytown.
Design a school system that is more than one feeder pattern.
Anonymous wrote:It looks to me like both petitions are asking for the same thing. They support higher at-risk funding levels, and don't support cuts >5% to any existing program. They just say it in different orders. What am I missing?
Anonymous wrote:
OP forgot to include the petition to Help Save the Wilson High School Budget:
http://www.gopetition.com/petitions/save-wilson-high-school.html
Please help support DC's more diverse and successful high school, and THE ONE THAT INCLUDES THE HIGHEST NUMBER OF AT-RISK STUDENTS.