Anonymous wrote:Maybe “some moral imperative” is too strong and a poor word choice. There are some factors beyond just academics influencing people but its wrong too broad brush say they do not care about academics because they choose EH over Basis/private/moving.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You're not wrong but I'm a little surprised by how many neighborhood families seem OK with Eliot-Hine, Jefferson Academy and Stuart Hobson these days though. I'm not hearing too many complaints from friends and neighbors who are using these schools, most of them UMC and white.
There are stats on this that were posted recently. It’s actually not that many families choosing their IB middle school, no matter what boosters like you post (repeatedly).
Give me a break. I'm no booster. My children attend a parochial middle school in VA. I've been fed up with our DCPS ES post Covid, thrilled that we only have one week of 5th grade left. But I'm genuinely surprised by how many of the brainy families we've known on the Hill for many years are actually sending their children to Eliot Hine, Jefferson or Stuart Hobson for 6th or 7th grade. You don't have to be a booster to notice the uptick in Hill enrollment or to comment on it here.
Your alleged surprise doesn’t trump the actual numbers, which actually tell the opposite story.
I know quite a few parents who are sending their kids to Stuart Hobson and Eliot. None of them have kids who are really academic achievers so they feel comfortable in a low key environment where academics isn’t such a priority.
Ha, you might group my kid in there, but I’d gladly share his IQ tests to disabuse you of that notion … The kids I know going to EH come from very accomplished families who are comfortable with EH likely because of that.
Why?
Because they don’t think their kid needs to be hothoused/tiger-mommed to succeed. I don’t necessarily share that view entirely but for various reasons we are trying it out. Believe me when I tell you some very, very bright kids will be going.
As a brown person, it’s always been my perception that these kids scoop up all the advantages that should be going to the brown kids, while allowing their parents to pretend to be super woke and brag to their other white friends. I find it disgusting. But that’s just my opinion (and I am totally certain I’m not alone!).
Anonymous wrote:Some people genuinely want to believe in and support neighborhood/community schools. They are aware of the problem that gentrifiers in urban neighborhoods statistically largely opt for private and charter schools, irrespective or the underlying quality of the neighborhood public schools. Does not really matter if it is Oakland, New York, or DC. DCPS could do a lot more to support advanced middle school coursework. But that is another issue. There are families in our neighborhood who care a lot about academics but who may also feel some moral imperative to attend the nearby public school.
Anonymous wrote:Some people genuinely want to believe in and support neighborhood/community schools. They are aware of the problem that gentrifiers in urban neighborhoods statistically largely opt for private and charter schools, irrespective or the underlying quality of the neighborhood public schools. Does not really matter if it is Oakland, New York, or DC. DCPS could do a lot more to support advanced middle school coursework. But that is another issue. There are families in our neighborhood who care a lot about academics but who may also feel some moral imperative to attend the nearby public school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You're not wrong but I'm a little surprised by how many neighborhood families seem OK with Eliot-Hine, Jefferson Academy and Stuart Hobson these days though. I'm not hearing too many complaints from friends and neighbors who are using these schools, most of them UMC and white.
There are stats on this that were posted recently. It’s actually not that many families choosing their IB middle school, no matter what boosters like you post (repeatedly).
Give me a break. I'm no booster. My children attend a parochial middle school in VA. I've been fed up with our DCPS ES post Covid, thrilled that we only have one week of 5th grade left. But I'm genuinely surprised by how many of the brainy families we've known on the Hill for many years are actually sending their children to Eliot Hine, Jefferson or Stuart Hobson for 6th or 7th grade. You don't have to be a booster to notice the uptick in Hill enrollment or to comment on it here.
Your alleged surprise doesn’t trump the actual numbers, which actually tell the opposite story.
I know quite a few parents who are sending their kids to Stuart Hobson and Eliot. None of them have kids who are really academic achievers so they feel comfortable in a low key environment where academics isn’t such a priority.
Ha, you might group my kid in there, but I’d gladly share his IQ tests to disabuse you of that notion … The kids I know going to EH come from very accomplished families who are comfortable with EH likely because of that.
Why?
Because they don’t think their kid needs to be hothoused/tiger-mommed to succeed. I don’t necessarily share that view entirely but for various reasons we are trying it out. Believe me when I tell you some very, very bright kids will be going.
As a brown person, it’s always been my perception that these kids scoop up all the advantages that should be going to the brown kids, while allowing their parents to pretend to be super woke and brag to their other white friends. I find it disgusting. But that’s just my opinion (and I am totally certain I’m not alone!).
What specifically are those advantages, and why should they be going to "the brown kids"?
There are some advantages to going to a poor school, such as specific internships ska scholarships. Those are geared towards the economically disadvantaged but the quiet parents scoop them all up since they know how to package their kids. I mean if you think this is ethical then good for you I guess?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You're not wrong but I'm a little surprised by how many neighborhood families seem OK with Eliot-Hine, Jefferson Academy and Stuart Hobson these days though. I'm not hearing too many complaints from friends and neighbors who are using these schools, most of them UMC and white.
There are stats on this that were posted recently. It’s actually not that many families choosing their IB middle school, no matter what boosters like you post (repeatedly).
Give me a break. I'm no booster. My children attend a parochial middle school in VA. I've been fed up with our DCPS ES post Covid, thrilled that we only have one week of 5th grade left. But I'm genuinely surprised by how many of the brainy families we've known on the Hill for many years are actually sending their children to Eliot Hine, Jefferson or Stuart Hobson for 6th or 7th grade. You don't have to be a booster to notice the uptick in Hill enrollment or to comment on it here.
Your alleged surprise doesn’t trump the actual numbers, which actually tell the opposite story.
I know quite a few parents who are sending their kids to Stuart Hobson and Eliot. None of them have kids who are really academic achievers so they feel comfortable in a low key environment where academics isn’t such a priority.
This is not true in my experience. Yes, the academic high flyers at our IB mostly try for Latin and Basis, but if they don't get in, they typically do head to SH. It's parents whose kids who are doing fine but not great who are more likely to move in those circumstances. This year's 4th grade at our school has a ton of kids coming back for 5th as of now and weirdly the best students are all returning (some got shut out in the lottery, some had a miserable BASIS shadow day and refused to go, and some have true believer parents... so it's a mixed bag). If they actually go on to SH the next year in any meaningful percentage, I think it could start a trend at the school because parents looking at the fifth grade next year and then at who goes to SH the following year will no longer have the same FOMO. We'll see.
That is some magical thinking. Everyone I know who is at Stuart Hobson either doesn’t care about academics at all (due to bigger problems or not being very motivated) or is desperately playing the lottery.
I heard about this “trend” towards attending Stuart Hobson when my son started kindergarten in 2013.
Anonymous wrote:Some people genuinely want to believe in and support neighborhood/community schools. They are aware of the problem that gentrifiers in urban neighborhoods statistically largely opt for private and charter schools, irrespective or the underlying quality of the neighborhood public schools. Does not really matter if it is Oakland, New York, or DC. DCPS could do a lot more to support advanced middle school coursework. But that is another issue. There are families in our neighborhood who care a lot about academics but who may also feel some moral imperative to attend the nearby public school.