Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You all know that Shepherd is 74% non-white and 7% at-risk, right? 7% at risk is maybe 3 kids per grade? So we're going to pull 3 kids per year into a separate feeder pattern? Based on which year of at-risk status? The entry year into the school? Matriculating grade?
Don’t try and muck this conversation up with actual percentages and numbers. You are ruining the vibes. They only want what’s best for at-risk kids even though it makes little sense
Bad stats. Shepherd is 55% AA, and 8% Hispanic. It's 26% white. The neighborhood itself -like Bancroft's is becoming more and more white. Shepherd and Lafayette are Ward 4 schools and should be routed to Ward 4 MS/HS. Lafayette was going to get its own set-aside ECE program but they refused to sully their hands crossing the park. Shepherd has similarly displayed annoyed and entitled behavior. Boundaries and feeder patterns change. Ask Crestwood.
Right, and 100 minus 26 is ... 74 (because it's 11% mixed race). And it's still 7% at-risk, even though *gasp* it's mostly brown kids. https://profiles.dcps.dc.gov/Shepherd+Elementary+School
This has been talked to death already, but Bancroft and Shepherd are the only two majority minority schools that feed into Deal. Shepherd Park is not gentrifying like Mount Pleasant because Shepherd Park was ALWAYS MC/UMC. MP's gentrification means Bancroft's demographics are changing rapidly, while Shepherd has been, and continues to be, the preferred DCPS for MC and UMC black families, even if it's ALSO getting more buy in from white families. That makes it a political non-starter to cut Shepherd out of Deal/JR. Bancroft on the other hand, is a bilingual school geographically closer to the DCPS bilingual middle and high schools. And agreed about Lafayette - it's in Ward 4 and should feed to Ward 4 middle/high schools. It's also more than twice the size of Shepherd, and would actually make a dent in Deal overcrowding.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There is a ceiling, though, to how upper-middle class Bancroft will become, and it may have hit it. There are FAR more subsidized apartments and affordable apartments in the Bancroft geography than there are million-dollar plus row houses. The Woodner alone has more families than the rowhouses do.
This.
If Bancroft is fed to MacFarland, MacFarland will be awesome.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You all know that Shepherd is 74% non-white and 7% at-risk, right? 7% at risk is maybe 3 kids per grade? So we're going to pull 3 kids per year into a separate feeder pattern? Based on which year of at-risk status? The entry year into the school? Matriculating grade?
Don’t try and muck this conversation up with actual percentages and numbers. You are ruining the vibes. They only want what’s best for at-risk kids even though it makes little sense
Bad stats. Shepherd is 55% AA, and 8% Hispanic. It's 26% white. The neighborhood itself -like Bancroft's is becoming more and more white. Shepherd and Lafayette are Ward 4 schools and should be routed to Ward 4 MS/HS. Lafayette was going to get its own set-aside ECE program but they refused to sully their hands crossing the park. Shepherd has similarly displayed annoyed and entitled behavior. Boundaries and feeder patterns change. Ask Crestwood.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You all know that Shepherd is 74% non-white and 7% at-risk, right? 7% at risk is maybe 3 kids per grade? So we're going to pull 3 kids per year into a separate feeder pattern? Based on which year of at-risk status? The entry year into the school? Matriculating grade?
Don’t try and muck this conversation up with actual percentages and numbers. You are ruining the vibes. They only want what’s best for at-risk kids even though it makes little sense
Anonymous wrote:You all know that Shepherd is 74% non-white and 7% at-risk, right? 7% at risk is maybe 3 kids per grade? So we're going to pull 3 kids per year into a separate feeder pattern? Based on which year of at-risk status? The entry year into the school? Matriculating grade?
Anonymous wrote:You all know that Shepherd is 74% non-white and 7% at-risk, right? 7% at risk is maybe 3 kids per grade? So we're going to pull 3 kids per year into a separate feeder pattern? Based on which year of at-risk status? The entry year into the school? Matriculating grade?
Anonymous wrote:Possibly, but when you center white parents talking about diversity in the first breath, and in the next breath whining about property values - not a good look. Shepherd needs to be re-routed except for at-risk students (which skew OOB). I think that's actually a brilliant proposal from the Bancroft parent. Shepherd should feed West only for at-risk. Rejigger Lafayette boundaries, and I think we have solved overcrowding at Deal!Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's really clear when you saw the last version of the boundaries discussion that it wasn't Black, Latino, lower-income Bancroft families demanding remaining in the Wilson-now-JR feeder pattern, it was clearly the pearl-clutching white folks who didn't buy inbounds for Stoddert or Janney who NEEDED to be in the JR boundary. And of course these parents were hyping the "diversity" that Bancroft was providing to JR though of course they were um "not that."
To me, that's the thing to end. If Bancroft feeds west, make it only at-risk families feed west. Everybody else, welcome to your neighborhood schools pattern and the lottery from out-of-bounds.
Yep. It’s exactly the same with Shepherd - all the wealthy white parents talking about the diversity of the school - pathetic and performative.
That’s…not my experience with shepherd. Maintaining the feeder pattern is a pretty universal sentiment.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Possibly, but when you center white parents talking about diversity in the first breath, and in the next breath whining about property values - not a good look. Shepherd needs to be re-routed except for at-risk students (which skew OOB). I think that's actually a brilliant proposal from the Bancroft parent. Shepherd should feed West only for at-risk. Rejigger Lafayette boundaries, and I think we have solved overcrowding at Deal!Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's really clear when you saw the last version of the boundaries discussion that it wasn't Black, Latino, lower-income Bancroft families demanding remaining in the Wilson-now-JR feeder pattern, it was clearly the pearl-clutching white folks who didn't buy inbounds for Stoddert or Janney who NEEDED to be in the JR boundary. And of course these parents were hyping the "diversity" that Bancroft was providing to JR though of course they were um "not that."
To me, that's the thing to end. If Bancroft feeds west, make it only at-risk families feed west. Everybody else, welcome to your neighborhood schools pattern and the lottery from out-of-bounds.
Yep. It’s exactly the same with Shepherd - all the wealthy white parents talking about the diversity of the school - pathetic and performative.
That’s…not my experience with shepherd. Maintaining the feeder pattern is a pretty universal sentiment.
How is your proposal not “center[ing] white parents”? Lol
Creating specific at-risk set-asides for Bancroft and Shepherd students, and routing the rest of the students eastward, arguendo, would not be preferred by most white parents in these schools.
Anonymous wrote:Possibly, but when you center white parents talking about diversity in the first breath, and in the next breath whining about property values - not a good look. Shepherd needs to be re-routed except for at-risk students (which skew OOB). I think that's actually a brilliant proposal from the Bancroft parent. Shepherd should feed West only for at-risk. Rejigger Lafayette boundaries, and I think we have solved overcrowding at Deal!Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's really clear when you saw the last version of the boundaries discussion that it wasn't Black, Latino, lower-income Bancroft families demanding remaining in the Wilson-now-JR feeder pattern, it was clearly the pearl-clutching white folks who didn't buy inbounds for Stoddert or Janney who NEEDED to be in the JR boundary. And of course these parents were hyping the "diversity" that Bancroft was providing to JR though of course they were um "not that."
To me, that's the thing to end. If Bancroft feeds west, make it only at-risk families feed west. Everybody else, welcome to your neighborhood schools pattern and the lottery from out-of-bounds.
Yep. It’s exactly the same with Shepherd - all the wealthy white parents talking about the diversity of the school - pathetic and performative.
That’s…not my experience with shepherd. Maintaining the feeder pattern is a pretty universal sentiment.
Possibly, but when you center white parents talking about diversity in the first breath, and in the next breath whining about property values - not a good look. Shepherd needs to be re-routed except for at-risk students (which skew OOB). I think that's actually a brilliant proposal from the Bancroft parent. Shepherd should feed West only for at-risk. Rejigger Lafayette boundaries, and I think we have solved overcrowding at Deal!Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's really clear when you saw the last version of the boundaries discussion that it wasn't Black, Latino, lower-income Bancroft families demanding remaining in the Wilson-now-JR feeder pattern, it was clearly the pearl-clutching white folks who didn't buy inbounds for Stoddert or Janney who NEEDED to be in the JR boundary. And of course these parents were hyping the "diversity" that Bancroft was providing to JR though of course they were um "not that."
To me, that's the thing to end. If Bancroft feeds west, make it only at-risk families feed west. Everybody else, welcome to your neighborhood schools pattern and the lottery from out-of-bounds.
Yep. It’s exactly the same with Shepherd - all the wealthy white parents talking about the diversity of the school - pathetic and performative.
That’s…not my experience with shepherd. Maintaining the feeder pattern is a pretty universal sentiment.