Anonymous wrote:A few approaches:
1 - do not let Deal / Hardy take any kids who do not have current rights to them. Audit HARD enrollment. If policy is if you move OOB during elementary school you no longer have rights to the feeder pattern - enforce it.
You need to get a critical mass of kids at the other middle schools. The only way you do it is cut off path to Deal / Hardy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The whole city should be outraged. It wouldn't occur to a lot of other places/cities that they need to fight and constantly lobby for safe, 50-90 % at grade level or higher. But in DC this is the case it is sad. But then we keep voting in that don't seem to do much about it.
The middle class middle students are concentrated at one middle school in the city. This leaves a very small amount of kids sprinkled at Hardy, SH, and charters. The remaining students are in deep poverty and don’t have adequate support and facing things at home that you can’t even imagine. If middle schools are 90% at risk are you really blaming the school or city that only 1/3 of those students are at level? You should be advocating for social justice, affordable housing, and jobs before even you can see the impact in the schools.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The whole city should be outraged. It wouldn't occur to a lot of other places/cities that they need to fight and constantly lobby for safe, 50-90 % at grade level or higher. But in DC this is the case it is sad. But then we keep voting in that don't seem to do much about it.
In which city -- an urban area -- in America are 50-90% of public school student at grade level or high? I'll wait for you to name them.
You cannot fix student achievement with votes or even with funding education alone. You need to virtually eliminate poverty, unemployment, trauma, and crime. If DC's leaders were doing this AND our schools were filled with low-achieving students then you'd be on point.
Anonymous wrote:And I’ll add if you have a student that is driven and smart, they can succeed at a number of schools. I went to gang infested middle school where some peers were pregnant in 8th grade. Probably 25% performing. There was no school choice. It was either that school or private which was not an option. Not only did I succeed, I excelled and got into one of the top magnets in the state. The school (teachers and admin) weren’t bad, they did what they could with the student population that had. They knew who the serious students were and they made sure we got what we want scholastically and socially. Try to check out your IB, see if they have advocates within the building. You may be surprised.
Anonymous wrote:The whole city should be outraged. It wouldn't occur to a lot of other places/cities that they need to fight and constantly lobby for safe, 50-90 % at grade level or higher. But in DC this is the case it is sad. But then we keep voting in that don't seem to do much about it.
Anonymous wrote:The whole city should be outraged. It wouldn't occur to a lot of other places/cities that they need to fight and constantly lobby for safe, 50-90 % at grade level or higher. But in DC this is the case it is sad. But then we keep voting in that don't seem to do much about it.