Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It will have a lot of IB kids in the early grades and be fairly racially and economically diverse, with some kids from public housing and some from million-dollar homes.
By the testing grades, many families with the means to move will do so (if you can't afford a big townhome, you may not want to squeeze in a 2br apartment; if you can afford one of the big houses you could just as easily afford a place in the suburbs or upper NW). This will create room for more OOB kids, who will mostly be residents of Wards 7 and 8 (the school is conveniently located near metro and bus lines, on the way to downtown). Test scores will reflect large racial and economic achievement gaps, and the perceived lack of a good middle school option will amplify the issue. The high-scoring kids who stick it out until 3rd or 4th grade will leave if they get into Latin, Basis, or a school that feeds Deal, Hardy, possibly Stuart-Hobson, and maybe a few charters with middle schools (DCI, IT, 2R).
The PTA will be dominated by higher-income kids in younger grades, and will struggle to get participation from others. It will raise a lot of money, though--from parents and local businesses.
The school may go back and forth in terms of Title I status, leading to frequent changes in programming, costs for aftercare, etc. Some people will be glad if the school is not Title I and others will want the money it provides.
So it will be like a smaller Watkins?
Anonymous wrote:My kids are older so no dog in the fight anymore, but I visited VN and found it to be amazing. I think it has just as much potential as Brent/Maury, possibly even more than LT with a new principal yet again, though LT does have the advantage of a S-H feed. I'm really excited about VN's prospects. I think there are plenty of middle class people who will want to stay in such a vibrant area close to work and Metro and keep their kids at VN. Then they can look at the charters, Catholic, private for middle schools.
Anonymous wrote:It will have a lot of IB kids in the early grades and be fairly racially and economically diverse, with some kids from public housing and some from million-dollar homes.
By the testing grades, many families with the means to move will do so (if you can't afford a big townhome, you may not want to squeeze in a 2br apartment; if you can afford one of the big houses you could just as easily afford a place in the suburbs or upper NW). This will create room for more OOB kids, who will mostly be residents of Wards 7 and 8 (the school is conveniently located near metro and bus lines, on the way to downtown). Test scores will reflect large racial and economic achievement gaps, and the perceived lack of a good middle school option will amplify the issue. The high-scoring kids who stick it out until 3rd or 4th grade will leave if they get into Latin, Basis, or a school that feeds Deal, Hardy, possibly Stuart-Hobson, and maybe a few charters with middle schools (DCI, IT, 2R).
The PTA will be dominated by higher-income kids in younger grades, and will struggle to get participation from others. It will raise a lot of money, though--from parents and local businesses.
The school may go back and forth in terms of Title I status, leading to frequent changes in programming, costs for aftercare, etc. Some people will be glad if the school is not Title I and others will want the money it provides.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
It will gradually improve, but ultimately the upper grades will only be as good as the middle school to which it feeds.
Well, none of the schools OP mentioned has a good middle school (the best MS feed is LT, which is apparently the school OP is least interested in). So that does nothing to answer the question. I think those are all nice schools, but if you will only be comfortable with a majority-white class then you should buy IB for Brent or Maury.
Is this what the discourse has come to?Anonymous wrote:
It will gradually improve, but ultimately the upper grades will only be as good as the middle school to which it feeds.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:JO wilson
JO Wilson and LT have more potential than Maury and Brent and Van Ness due to middle school feed. Maury and Brent are played out and will always be chaotic in the upper grades with churn.
Anonymous wrote:JO wilson
Anonymous wrote:We're thinking of moving into the Capitol Riverfront and would love for the kids to attend the in-bound school, which is Van Ness. What do people think of Van Ness now, and what do people anticipate the school will be like in the next 5 years or so?