Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How about stronger because most VN families seem happy with the two. I've heard very few complaints (as with the Brent 1st grade teaching team).
It's no secret that there were a great many complaints about all three K teachers at Brent last year.
A great many complaints? You do realize that Brent is a public school, not Maret or Beauvoir?
Anonymous wrote:Or Brent should sort out its messed up PreK4 lottery situation and problematic K instruction.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't think we are saying different things. I have no problem with OOB students at Brent. If you fix the PK situation by only having PK4, there would likely be some OOB spots for PK4 in certain years. Also, I don't think it's "entitled" for me to want my child to go to public PK and to want to support and be involved in the neighborhood school and in DCPS more generally. We didn't get in anywhere so it may be two more years before that happens (if we stay).
I agree, and hope you won't let name callers get down. Sorry that you're in this situation.
When you say you didn't get in anywhere, you mean nowhere on the Hill for PreS3? You didn't have proximity preference at Van Ness or anywhere else?
Hang in there.
Anonymous wrote:How about stronger because most VN families seem happy with the two. I've heard very few complaints (as with the Brent 1st grade teaching team).
It's no secret that there were a great many complaints about all three K teachers at Brent last year.
Anonymous wrote:How about stronger because most VN families seem happy with the two. I've heard very few complaints (as with the Brent 1st grade teaching team).
It's no secret that there were a great many complaints about all three K teachers at Brent last year.
Anonymous wrote:Back to the topic at hand, I see a bright future for Van Ness, with some of the in boundary Brent families staying on indefinitely.
There are parents living in the lower blocks of the Brent District who've discovered that they like the commute despite the CSX tunnel messiness. Also, the K teaching team at Van Ness is stronger. The new school has so much to recommend it.
Good luck to the VN families this fall.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Back to the topic at hand, I see a bright future for Van Ness, with some of the in boundary Brent families staying on indefinitely.
There are parents living in the lower blocks of the Brent District who've discovered that they like the commute despite the CSX tunnel messiness. Also, the K teaching team at Van Ness is stronger. The new school has so much to recommend it.
Good luck to the VN families this fall.
Nobody would leave Brent for Van Ness (unless you're talking about PK and they didn't get in to Brent IB). And after 4th grade, everybody leaves Brent - but it sure isn't for Van Ness.
You're PK parents though, so you apparently don't yet understand the middle school crisis that's been going on in DC for at least 50 years. Don't worry, you'll catch by K, when whatever Brent students you have, go back to Brent.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Back to the topic at hand, I see a bright future for Van Ness, with some of the in boundary Brent families staying on indefinitely.
There are parents living in the lower blocks of the Brent District who've discovered that they like the commute despite the CSX tunnel messiness. Also, the K teaching team at Van Ness is stronger. The new school has so much to recommend it.
Good luck to the VN families this fall.
Nobody would leave Brent for Van Ness (unless you're talking about PK and they didn't get in to Brent IB). And after 4th grade, everybody leaves Brent - but it sure isn't for Van Ness.
You're PK parents though, so you apparently don't yet understand the middle school crisis that's been going on in DC for at least 50 years. Don't worry, you'll catch by K, when whatever Brent students you have, go back to Brent.
This is an unnecessary comment that you cannot come close to backing up with the facts. This is not a zero sum game, Brent and VN can both be good schools. And I know several PK4 families that are thinking about staying for a variety of reasons.
Would people leave Brent for VN, what does that prove? If the IB Brent families come back, it is a personal choice I'm sure based on a lot of decisions including it can be difficult to get a 5 year old to walk, bus, bike, etc a mile in the cold, rain, heat.
Post like this are why most other places in the city hate Brent, Brent parents etc. It is a good school and I'm glad I can send my kids there. However there are other good schools in the city where I would be just as happy. I just don't live there.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Back to the topic at hand, I see a bright future for Van Ness, with some of the in boundary Brent families staying on indefinitely.
There are parents living in the lower blocks of the Brent District who've discovered that they like the commute despite the CSX tunnel messiness. Also, the K teaching team at Van Ness is stronger. The new school has so much to recommend it.
Good luck to the VN families this fall.
Nobody would leave Brent for Van Ness (unless you're talking about PK and they didn't get in to Brent IB). And after 4th grade, everybody leaves Brent - but it sure isn't for Van Ness.
You're PK parents though, so you apparently don't yet understand the middle school crisis that's been going on in DC for at least 50 years. Don't worry, you'll catch by K, when whatever Brent students you have, go back to Brent.
Anonymous wrote:Back to the topic at hand, I see a bright future for Van Ness, with some of the in boundary Brent families staying on indefinitely.
There are parents living in the lower blocks of the Brent District who've discovered that they like the commute despite the CSX tunnel messiness. Also, the K teaching team at Van Ness is stronger. The new school has so much to recommend it.
Good luck to the VN families this fall.