Anonymous wrote:Solutions:
--Add additional space.
--Get rid of PK classrooms.
--Shrink boundaries
--Open a new elementary school (or one devoted just to Early Education) in Ward 3 to take off some of the pressure.
--Leave as is and suffer through knowing that the bubble will pass.
Anonymous wrote:Reclaim Hardy, for one.
Reduce/remove feeder rights.
Anonymous wrote:Didn't we talk about Old Hardy a few years ago? Its used by the lab now - couldn't we bring that building back?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Tons of space city wide. Redraw the lines before opening any new DCPS schools.
A boundary adjustment was just done--they're not going to redo it anytime soon.
Anonymous wrote:Tons of space city wide. Redraw the lines before opening any new DCPS schools.
Anonymous wrote:Solutions:
--Add additional space.
--Get rid of PK classrooms.
--Shrink boundaries
--Open a new elementary school (or one devoted just to Early Education) in Ward 3 to take off some of the pressure.
--Leave as is and suffer through knowing that the bubble will pass.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Solutions:
--Add additional space.
--Get rid of PK classrooms.
--Shrink boundaries
--Open a new elementary school (or one devoted just to Early Education) in Ward 3 to take off some of the pressure.
--Leave as is and suffer through knowing that the bubble will pass.
Office of planning doesn't think it's a bubble. They're projecting DC will exceed its all-time high population by 2030. Fifty years ago DCPS had almost 150,000 students.
Anonymous wrote:Solutions:
--Add additional space.
--Get rid of PK classrooms.
--Shrink boundaries
--Open a new elementary school (or one devoted just to Early Education) in Ward 3 to take off some of the pressure.
--Leave as is and suffer through knowing that the bubble will pass.
Anonymous wrote:Reclaim Hardy, for one.
Reduce/remove feeder rights.