Anonymous wrote:Adding trailers is a small price to pay so that Hearst and Eaton can do their part to ensure an integrated public school system. One City!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don’t think the 26:1 ratio is Hearst, as we have partner teachers through 2nd grade, and the upper grades aren’t that large.
Seems really unlikely. My child’s early elementary class there has 20 kids, one teacher, and a partner teacher.
Anonymous wrote:I don’t think the 26:1 ratio is Hearst, as we have partner teachers through 2nd grade, and the upper grades aren’t that large.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hearst’s capacity is 325, and its enrollment for this year is 312. So hardly over capacity. The outrage towards OOB children seems a bit irrational.
It’s not just that it’s overcrowded. It’s that it’s not equally distributed. The early grades are getting crushed. All these sanctimonious 4th and 5th grade parents are reminiscing about a school that no longer exists. It was nice to accommodate OOB kids when classes were 18-20 kids. Come on down off your pedistal and see what 26 kids looks like.
Sometimes achieving social justice requires sacrifice.
Anonymous wrote:Hearst’s capacity is 325, and its enrollment for this year is 312. So hardly over capacity. The outrage towards OOB children seems a bit irrational.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hearst’s capacity is 325, and its enrollment for this year is 312. So hardly over capacity. The outrage towards OOB children seems a bit irrational.
So basically Hearst will be at capacity in the next year. The community needs to decide whether Hearst should be enlarged further to maintain significant OOB enrollment. Would Hearst be okay if DCPS basically imposes a minimum OOB enrollment as they appently are doing as John Eaton is modernized?
This is my perhaps naive understanding of how things work. Schools have a building capacity. If that is not filled in a given year, OOB lottery slots are offered. If it is, they’re not. My concern as a dcps parent is how many students there are for each classroom teacher in an elementary school like Hearst. As far as I know, that’s not affected by how many students there are total. If a school goes over capacity, that’s not because of OOB students, it’s because of an increase in IB students. So I’m not sure how OOB students are a problem.
Ensuring that a school doesn’t go over coacity is the principal’s job. As IB enrollment climbs, OOB needs to be managed down. The problem is that an OOB student has the right to remain at the school through the end of 5th grade (and then to go to overcrowded Deal and Wilson, but that’s a different issue). Add sibling enrollment rights to that, and it can be a long time before an OOB family cycles through the school. It’s a bit like turning a large ship. What the principal needs to do, once the school reaches near-capacity and with IB enrollment continuing to climb is to resist political pressure from the central office or the temptation to some marginal per pupil dollars, and to avoid filling spots that may open in certain grades even as the school is quite full. Otherwise, it becomes very difficult to throttle OOB enrollment back even with the school at capacity.
PP here. That makes a lot of sense. Is there any chance some of the PTA funds could be used to ease the transition by hiring extra teachers or co-teachers when the number of kids in a class unexpectedly exceeds a given number? I know we pay for co-teachers in the early grades. Just thinking out loud.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hearst’s capacity is 325, and its enrollment for this year is 312. So hardly over capacity. The outrage towards OOB children seems a bit irrational.
So basically Hearst will be at capacity in the next year. The community needs to decide whether Hearst should be enlarged further to maintain significant OOB enrollment. Would Hearst be okay if DCPS basically imposes a minimum OOB enrollment as they appently are doing as John Eaton is modernized?
This is my perhaps naive understanding of how things work. Schools have a building capacity. If that is not filled in a given year, OOB lottery slots are offered. If it is, they’re not. My concern as a dcps parent is how many students there are for each classroom teacher in an elementary school like Hearst. As far as I know, that’s not affected by how many students there are total. If a school goes over capacity, that’s not because of OOB students, it’s because of an increase in IB students. So I’m not sure how OOB students are a problem.
Ensuring that a school doesn’t go over coacity is the principal’s job. As IB enrollment climbs, OOB needs to be managed down. The problem is that an OOB student has the right to remain at the school through the end of 5th grade (and then to go to overcrowded Deal and Wilson, but that’s a different issue). Add sibling enrollment rights to that, and it can be a long time before an OOB family cycles through the school. It’s a bit like turning a large ship. What the principal needs to do, once the school reaches near-capacity and with IB enrollment continuing to climb is to resist political pressure from the central office or the temptation to some marginal per pupil dollars, and to avoid filling spots that may open in certain grades even as the school is quite full. Otherwise, it becomes very difficult to throttle OOB enrollment back even with the school at capacity.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hearst’s capacity is 325, and its enrollment for this year is 312. So hardly over capacity. The outrage towards OOB children seems a bit irrational.
It’s not just that it’s overcrowded. It’s that it’s not equally distributed. The early grades are getting crushed. All these sanctimonious 4th and 5th grade parents are reminiscing about a school that no longer exists. It was nice to accommodate OOB kids when classes were 18-20 kids. Come on down off your pedistal and see what 26 kids looks like.
Anonymous wrote:Hearst’s capacity is 325, and its enrollment for this year is 312. So hardly over capacity. The outrage towards OOB children seems a bit irrational.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hearst’s capacity is 325, and its enrollment for this year is 312. So hardly over capacity. The outrage towards OOB children seems a bit irrational.
So basically Hearst will be at capacity in the next year. The community needs to decide whether Hearst should be enlarged further to maintain significant OOB enrollment. Would Hearst be okay if DCPS basically imposes a minimum OOB enrollment as they appently are doing as John Eaton is modernized?
I think Eaton is being enlarged as it’s being renovated to prepare for a projected increase in IB kids. Hearst has just been renovated, so I don’t know that that’s in the cards.