Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My son went to Hardy and my dd is there now. Love it. I'd take a middle school with under 400 kids, a fabulous principal and good teachers any day. Deal is perfectly fine as well. Just A LOT bigger.
I do like the idea of a smaller school; those numbers are closer to what kids are accustomed to. What did/do your kids like about Hardy? How are the sports and EC opportunities?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It looks like the math proficiency numbers for both are pretty poor and that Deal has reading proficiency > 50%. Does either school offer ability tracking?
For those with kids at either school, can you tell me what they like/dislike about it?
Both schools track for math, and if you have already been taking a foreign language / are a native speaker you can take the advanced language classes at Deal.
You can drill much deeper into the math data on this spreadsheet -- it's a little daunting and confusing because in DC Alg 1 and GEometry are both considered 'high school' math. But what it says is that the most advanced math students at both schools are performing well.
https://drive.google.com/file/d/0B5Zty67J29gLbnNGaHlkbUcyLVk/view
Another easier way is at results.osse.dc.gov -- search for each school. The challenge is if there are fewer than 25 students taking Algebra or Geometry (which is the case at hardy) their scores won't be visible.
Anonymous wrote:It looks like the math proficiency numbers for both are pretty poor and that Deal has reading proficiency > 50%. Does either school offer ability tracking?
For those with kids at either school, can you tell me what they like/dislike about it?
Anonymous wrote:My son went to Hardy and my dd is there now. Love it. I'd take a middle school with under 400 kids, a fabulous principal and good teachers any day. Deal is perfectly fine as well. Just A LOT bigger.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You must be new here....
I am, and I’m trying to figure out the schools issue ASAP before we get too attached to any house. We’re coming from a place where the school issue isn’t nearly so complicated. We have kids who are grade 4, 1, and pre-k. We’re looking at all options right now, but I would feel better knowing that we are IB for good public schools all the way through to relieve some of the uncertainty.
Anonymous wrote:Deal is perceived as the strongest DCPS middle school in the city. it is also huge -- which is a plus or minus, depending gon your child.
Hardy is perceived as improving to good. It is a much smaller school and doesn't have as many elective and extracurricular options as Deal. Right now, the majority of students at Hardy live outside the attendance zone. Many attended one of the feeder schools as an OOB student and continued to Hardy, or they entered Hardy via the citywide lottery at 6th.
Many families in the Hardy zone attend private school and others don't think the school is yet strong enough for their academically strong children.
It's school open house season in DC -- I'd suggest you visit both, and then find the best house you can. Real estate is tight in both areas so you should probably focus on the house you live knowing that either school is going to be ok.
Anonymous wrote:You must be new here....