Anonymous wrote:Perhaps it’s meaningful accountability when you can point to a single person/wrong-doer (Wilson, Niles) but not when the wrongdoing is embedded in the system (graduation rates, grades, attendance). Easier to indict a person rather than a system. Easier to replace too.
Anonymous wrote:Circumventing the lottery hurts all parents
Anonymous wrote:The lottery thing was different because it showed that the Chancellor has poor judgment. It was dumb of him to think he could get away with that. Nobody thinks the Ballou thing reflects specifically on the Chancellor's judgment and integrity as an individual. It's a different type of problem.
Anonymous wrote:Since when are Ellington students "advantaged"?
Anonymous wrote:
“The affluent also enjoy meaningful accountability from the district. Nat Malkus of the American Enterprise Institute has noted a twisted irony: After DCPS leaders systematically undermined high school diplomas for thousands of underserved students, a few folks were put on leave. But when one student cut the line to attend a high-performing high school serving students from advantaged backgrounds, the deputy mayor and chancellor were forced to resign.”
https://www.the74million.org/article/eden-d-c-public-schools-deserves-an-f-for-bogus-reforms-faked-successes-and-disastrous-failures/?utm_source=The+74+Million+Newsletter&utm_campaign=3a1faaaf0b-EMAIL_CAMPAIGN_2018_03_04&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_077b986842-3a1faaaf0b-176115937