Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I can think of 8 families off the top of my head in Lafayette bounds who bought @ $350K. I can think of a dozen more who bought < or = $500K.
I can also think of a number of families who attend LEJ OOB and: bought a $700K-$2.5m homes in the last 5 years who live EOTP, .....
Now you had to go and make this all creepy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:the implication of some comments seems to be that people EOTP are willing to directly share public resources and mix within schools with those who are poor and low-achieving, mostly black, sometimes Latino, while those WOTP are only OK if their group is a substantial cohort within a certain neighborhood/school. Well there are also certain charters, where probably the majority of EOTP upper class families have their kids, that are places where families of similar background cohort together rather than end up tiny minorities in schools full of poor students. So it's more complex than EOTP good, WOTP racist.
It's not racist to want your kids to be at a school where there is a strong cohort of others from a similar background. Studies have shown that nobody benefits when the low-achieving cohort is too strong.
So you're saying background amounts to just skin color? This drives me crazy. A black kid can't have same background as a white kid? What if their parents income is the same? What if the white kid is Irish-American? What if the white kid comes from Atheist family? What defines background?
Don't let yourself be driven crazy by something I didn't say. Where did I talk about skin color? "Similar background" usually refers to SES, and that's what I meant, because that is what primarily determines achievement, which is what I explicitly talked about. Now of course in DC SES and race are closely correlated, which is why people of higher SES who seek schools with a student population of higher (and in my case that means upper middle class) SES are often cast as racist, because they appear to prefer "white" schools. That this is not the case was the point of my post.
Anonymous wrote:Also, the schools wotp are the most diverse dcps schools in the city. The vast majority of families are MC and UMC from an SES standpoint, but culturally more diversity than you will find elsewhere in dcps. I think there may be more diversity at the HRCSs, but those are near impossible for anyone to get into no matter where in the city they live.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:the implication of some comments seems to be that people EOTP are willing to directly share public resources and mix within schools with those who are poor and low-achieving, mostly black, sometimes Latino, while those WOTP are only OK if their group is a substantial cohort within a certain neighborhood/school. Well there are also certain charters, where probably the majority of EOTP upper class families have their kids, that are places where families of similar background cohort together rather than end up tiny minorities in schools full of poor students. So it's more complex than EOTP good, WOTP racist.
It's not racist to want your kids to be at a school where there is a strong cohort of others from a similar background. Studies have shown that nobody benefits when the low-achieving cohort is too strong.
So you're saying background amounts to just skin color? This drives me crazy. A black kid can't have same background as a white kid? What if their parents income is the same? What if the white kid is Irish-American? What if the white kid comes from Atheist family? What defines background?
Anonymous wrote:I can think of 8 families off the top of my head in Lafayette bounds who bought @ $350K. I can think of a dozen more who bought < or = $500K.
I can also think of a number of families who attend LEJ OOB and: bought a $700K-$2.5m homes in the last 5 years who live EOTP, .....
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:the implication of some comments seems to be that people EOTP are willing to directly share public resources and mix within schools with those who are poor and low-achieving, mostly black, sometimes Latino, while those WOTP are only OK if their group is a substantial cohort within a certain neighborhood/school. Well there are also certain charters, where probably the majority of EOTP upper class families have their kids, that are places where families of similar background cohort together rather than end up tiny minorities in schools full of poor students. So it's more complex than EOTP good, WOTP racist.
It's not racist to want your kids to be at a school where there is a strong cohort of others from a similar background. Studies have shown that nobody benefits when the low-achieving cohort is too strong.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:the implication of some comments seems to be that people EOTP are willing to directly share public resources and mix within schools with those who are poor and low-achieving, mostly black, sometimes Latino, while those WOTP are only OK if their group is a substantial cohort within a certain neighborhood/school. Well there are also certain charters, where probably the majority of EOTP upper class families have their kids, that are places where families of similar background cohort together rather than end up tiny minorities in schools full of poor students. So it's more complex than EOTP good, WOTP racist.
It's not racist to want your kids to be at a school where there is a strong cohort of others from a similar background. Studies have shown that nobody benefits when the low-achieving cohort is too strong.
Anonymous wrote:the implication of some comments seems to be that people EOTP are willing to directly share public resources and mix within schools with those who are poor and low-achieving, mostly black, sometimes Latino, while those WOTP are only OK if their group is a substantial cohort within a certain neighborhood/school. Well there are also certain charters, where probably the majority of EOTP upper class families have their kids, that are places where families of similar background cohort together rather than end up tiny minorities in schools full of poor students. So it's more complex than EOTP good, WOTP racist.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:But the schools are better wotp, right? Isn't that the crux of the entire argument? That the original Lafayette thread OP was considering to enroll in a wotp school?
Define "better".
Average scores are higher - definitely.
Going to make a difference in my children's outcome? Less clear.
Anonymous wrote:But the schools are better wotp, right? Isn't that the crux of the entire argument? That the original Lafayette thread OP was considering to enroll in a wotp school?
Anonymous wrote:the folks saying I moved away from a "non-child friendly area" and "bought the best house I could afford" to justify a WOTP move aren't making the best arguments here...Lots of houses and kids east of RCP....