Anonymous wrote:Melissa crack downed but the school is predominantly AA back then and is now.
The school that you don't want, just might not want you. School choice is not a slogan...choose another school, good riddance. My word, we get it you've seen something that worries you and your unable to land your helicopter.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I've toured Eliot-Hine to take a look, in part, because the Cluster leadership and DCPS seemingly have done everything within their power to make sure my family will never attend Stuart-Hobson, which is within walking distance of our home. Sorry, but not at all impressed. Same with Jefferson. Too much focus on remediation for students who arrive unprepared for academic rigor and no track record of supporting higher achieving students. Ward 6 middle schools may talk a good game but test scores tell a different story.
Even if the academics were better at these middle schools, I wouldn't be OK with the peer group. We lived around the corner from Hobson and until recently. Over the years in NE, I grew weary of listening to students shout foul language from sidewalks and the playground, and of watching kids trip, push and thump one another while screaming or scarfing down junk food. We watched police race up to the school in squad cars too many times, charging in to break up a playground fight, make a drugs related arrest outside or whatever. Hobson is supposed to be the high-SES friendly school in the triumvirate. Sorry, but not impressed like the pp above.
Junk food! Sacre bleu.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I've toured Eliot-Hine to take a look, in part, because the Cluster leadership and DCPS seemingly have done everything within their power to make sure my family will never attend Stuart-Hobson, which is within walking distance of our home. Sorry, but not at all impressed. Same with Jefferson. Too much focus on remediation for students who arrive unprepared for academic rigor and no track record of supporting higher achieving students. Ward 6 middle schools may talk a good game but test scores tell a different story.
Even if the academics were better at these middle schools, I wouldn't be OK with the peer group. We lived around the corner from Hobson and until recently. Over the years in NE, I grew weary of listening to students shout foul language from sidewalks and the playground, and of watching kids trip, push and thump one another while screaming or scarfing down junk food. We watched police race up to the school in squad cars too many times, charging in to break up a playground fight, make a drugs related arrest outside or whatever. Hobson is supposed to be the high-SES friendly school in the triumvirate. Sorry, but not impressed like the pp above.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:+1. Hadn't thought in those terms but, yes, the red polo shirts draw one's attention to how badly behaved groups of S-H kids often are in the neighborhood. When I drive by KIPP middle schools at times when groups of kids are exiting, I don't see such rowdiness on display. Good for you for contacting Clemons - we should have done that.
As a longtime neighbor to Stuart Hobson, it seems that the behavior has gotten worse in the past few years. Perhaps I should say it's right back to where it was when we moved to the neighborhood, over a dozen years ago. I think the principal is an idiot letting the kids hang out, unsupervised, on the front step in the morning. A pack of middle school kids with no adult supervision is asking for trouble.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:+1. Hadn't thought in those terms but, yes, the red polo shirts draw one's attention to how badly behaved groups of S-H kids often are in the neighborhood. When I drive by KIPP middle schools at times when groups of kids are exiting, I don't see such rowdiness on display. Good for you for contacting Clemons - we should have done that.
As a longtime neighbor to Stuart Hobson, it seems that the behavior has gotten worse in the past few years. Perhaps I should say it's right back to where it was when we moved to the neighborhood, over a dozen years ago. I think the principal is an idiot letting the kids hang out, unsupervised, on the front step in the morning. A pack of middle school kids with no adult supervision is asking for trouble.