Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
They moved WJ cluster out thereby opening more seats to those in the other three clusters because with WJ in the Barnsley HGC cluster, there were less spots available for those from the other clusters because WJ had a ton of kids going to Barnsely HGC in previous years. Without this move, the other kids from the other clusters wouldn't get much of a chance. The move was so that those kids from the less well off areas get a chance.
Sure, it's nice that those kids have a chance, but let's not pretend why they did it, which was that it was much harder for those kids to compete with the WJ kids.
My DC went to Barnsely HGC with a ton of WJ kids. We are not in WJ cluster.
+1 Let's stop pretending that all schools have equal numbers of high achieving children. Notice I didn't say deserving children. But it's a fact that the number of "highly qualified" children according to MCPS's own criteria is much higher at WJ, BCC and Whitman than at the other schools.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
They moved WJ cluster out thereby opening more seats to those in the other three clusters because with WJ in the Barnsley HGC cluster, there were less spots available for those from the other clusters because WJ had a ton of kids going to Barnsely HGC in previous years. Without this move, the other kids from the other clusters wouldn't get much of a chance. The move was so that those kids from the less well off areas get a chance.
Sure, it's nice that those kids have a chance, but let's not pretend why they did it, which was that it was much harder for those kids to compete with the WJ kids.
My DC went to Barnsely HGC with a ton of WJ kids. We are not in WJ cluster.
+1 Let's stop pretending that all schools have equal numbers of high achieving children. Notice I didn't say deserving children. But it's a fact that the number of "highly qualified" children according to MCPS's own criteria is much higher at WJ, BCC and Whitman than at the other schools.
Anonymous wrote:
They moved WJ cluster out thereby opening more seats to those in the other three clusters because with WJ in the Barnsley HGC cluster, there were less spots available for those from the other clusters because WJ had a ton of kids going to Barnsely HGC in previous years. Without this move, the other kids from the other clusters wouldn't get much of a chance. The move was so that those kids from the less well off areas get a chance.
Sure, it's nice that those kids have a chance, but let's not pretend why they did it, which was that it was much harder for those kids to compete with the WJ kids.
My DC went to Barnsely HGC with a ton of WJ kids. We are not in WJ cluster.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No one said that.
What they said was it resulted in whites and Asians from WJ competing with whites and Asians from Whitman and BCC for CES spots - leaving Barnsley for more diverse populations.
Did the Barnsley CES program stay the same size, so that it's now just drawing from a smaller (and "more diverse") set of ES's - i.e., more spots for the ES schools that remained? And why would the person making that assertion even care about it unless they felt that it was now harder for students at WJ-cluster ES's to get into a CES program? If the same 28 kids from the WJ cluster who would have been Barnsley are now at CCES, what's the difference?
Of course they are arguing it's harder because they now now have to compete with "whites and Asians" rather than "more diverse populations."
Yes, Barnsley stayed the same size, three CES classes per grade.
So Barnsley, with three classes/grade, went from RM, Rockville, WJ and Wheaton (17-18) to RM, Rockville and Wheaton (18-19)? And CCES went from two classes for BCC and Whitman (17-18) to three classes for BCC, Whitman and WJ (18-19)? So the WJ kids went from competing for three classroom's worth of spots with three other high schools, to three classroom's worth of spots with two other high schools. Sounds great for the Wj kids, unless one thinks that competing with Whitman and BCC kids is harder than competing with RM,Rockville and Wheaton kids. Which is exactly what the poster was arguing (and not some ridiculous offense of having a diverse program at Barnsley become even more diverse). I'm of the view that, at the very top. there are equally very strong kids at every ES, and with the small number of kids who are offered spots, it really doesn't matter. So maybe MCPS actually created more spots by keeping Barnsley at three CES classes for the remaining clusters. That's fine by me, and would be consistent with its stated policies.
Yup, that's exactly what they did.
This hardly amounts to a countywide conspiracy to skew CES admissions to the under represented.
It's a way for non W cluster students a chance at the spot because without the change and with the peer cohort criteria, they wouldn't be able to get in. If they had done universal screening without looking at the peer cohort, the representation of certain groups wouldn't have changed that much. How do I know this... look at MCPS' own statistics in regards to test scores. Oh, I know, test scores don't tell you much, but I'm not sure what else you would look at for an academic program. Maybe how fast you could run? My DC would've failed that one.
Call it whatever you want.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No one said that.
What they said was it resulted in whites and Asians from WJ competing with whites and Asians from Whitman and BCC for CES spots - leaving Barnsley for more diverse populations.
Did the Barnsley CES program stay the same size, so that it's now just drawing from a smaller (and "more diverse") set of ES's - i.e., more spots for the ES schools that remained? And why would the person making that assertion even care about it unless they felt that it was now harder for students at WJ-cluster ES's to get into a CES program? If the same 28 kids from the WJ cluster who would have been Barnsley are now at CCES, what's the difference?
Of course they are arguing it's harder because they now now have to compete with "whites and Asians" rather than "more diverse populations."
Yes, Barnsley stayed the same size, three CES classes per grade.
So Barnsley, with three classes/grade, went from RM, Rockville, WJ and Wheaton (17-18) to RM, Rockville and Wheaton (18-19)? And CCES went from two classes for BCC and Whitman (17-18) to three classes for BCC, Whitman and WJ (18-19)? So the WJ kids went from competing for three classroom's worth of spots with three other high schools, to three classroom's worth of spots with two other high schools. Sounds great for the Wj kids, unless one thinks that competing with Whitman and BCC kids is harder than competing with RM,Rockville and Wheaton kids. Which is exactly what the poster was arguing (and not some ridiculous offense of having a diverse program at Barnsley become even more diverse). I'm of the view that, at the very top. there are equally very strong kids at every ES, and with the small number of kids who are offered spots, it really doesn't matter. So maybe MCPS actually created more spots by keeping Barnsley at three CES classes for the remaining clusters. That's fine by me, and would be consistent with its stated policies.
Yup, that's exactly what they did.
This hardly amounts to a countywide conspiracy to skew CES admissions to the under represented.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No one said that.
What they said was it resulted in whites and Asians from WJ competing with whites and Asians from Whitman and BCC for CES spots - leaving Barnsley for more diverse populations.
Did the Barnsley CES program stay the same size, so that it's now just drawing from a smaller (and "more diverse") set of ES's - i.e., more spots for the ES schools that remained? And why would the person making that assertion even care about it unless they felt that it was now harder for students at WJ-cluster ES's to get into a CES program? If the same 28 kids from the WJ cluster who would have been Barnsley are now at CCES, what's the difference?
Of course they are arguing it's harder because they now now have to compete with "whites and Asians" rather than "more diverse populations."
Yes, Barnsley stayed the same size, three CES classes per grade.
So Barnsley, with three classes/grade, went from RM, Rockville, WJ and Wheaton (17-18) to RM, Rockville and Wheaton (18-19)? And CCES went from two classes for BCC and Whitman (17-18) to three classes for BCC, Whitman and WJ (18-19)? So the WJ kids went from competing for three classroom's worth of spots with three other high schools, to three classroom's worth of spots with two other high schools. Sounds great for the Wj kids, unless one thinks that competing with Whitman and BCC kids is harder than competing with RM,Rockville and Wheaton kids. Which is exactly what the poster was arguing (and not some ridiculous offense of having a diverse program at Barnsley become even more diverse). I'm of the view that, at the very top. there are equally very strong kids at every ES, and with the small number of kids who are offered spots, it really doesn't matter. So maybe MCPS actually created more spots by keeping Barnsley at three CES classes for the remaining clusters. That's fine by me, and would be consistent with its stated policies.
Yup, that's exactly what they did.
This hardly amounts to a countywide conspiracy to skew CES admissions to the under represented.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No one said that.
What they said was it resulted in whites and Asians from WJ competing with whites and Asians from Whitman and BCC for CES spots - leaving Barnsley for more diverse populations.
Did the Barnsley CES program stay the same size, so that it's now just drawing from a smaller (and "more diverse") set of ES's - i.e., more spots for the ES schools that remained? And why would the person making that assertion even care about it unless they felt that it was now harder for students at WJ-cluster ES's to get into a CES program? If the same 28 kids from the WJ cluster who would have been Barnsley are now at CCES, what's the difference?
Of course they are arguing it's harder because they now now have to compete with "whites and Asians" rather than "more diverse populations."
Yes, Barnsley stayed the same size, three CES classes per grade.
So Barnsley, with three classes/grade, went from RM, Rockville, WJ and Wheaton (17-18) to RM, Rockville and Wheaton (18-19)? And CCES went from two classes for BCC and Whitman (17-18) to three classes for BCC, Whitman and WJ (18-19)? So the WJ kids went from competing for three classroom's worth of spots with three other high schools, to three classroom's worth of spots with two other high schools. Sounds great for the Wj kids, unless one thinks that competing with Whitman and BCC kids is harder than competing with RM,Rockville and Wheaton kids. Which is exactly what the poster was arguing (and not some ridiculous offense of having a diverse program at Barnsley become even more diverse). I'm of the view that, at the very top. there are equally very strong kids at every ES, and with the small number of kids who are offered spots, it really doesn't matter. So maybe MCPS actually created more spots by keeping Barnsley at three CES classes for the remaining clusters. That's fine by me, and would be consistent with its stated policies.
Yup, that's exactly what they did.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No one said that.
What they said was it resulted in whites and Asians from WJ competing with whites and Asians from Whitman and BCC for CES spots - leaving Barnsley for more diverse populations.
Did the Barnsley CES program stay the same size, so that it's now just drawing from a smaller (and "more diverse") set of ES's - i.e., more spots for the ES schools that remained? And why would the person making that assertion even care about it unless they felt that it was now harder for students at WJ-cluster ES's to get into a CES program? If the same 28 kids from the WJ cluster who would have been Barnsley are now at CCES, what's the difference?
Of course they are arguing it's harder because they now now have to compete with "whites and Asians" rather than "more diverse populations."
Yes, Barnsley stayed the same size, three CES classes per grade.
So Barnsley, with three classes/grade, went from RM, Rockville, WJ and Wheaton (17-18) to RM, Rockville and Wheaton (18-19)? And CCES went from two classes for BCC and Whitman (17-18) to three classes for BCC, Whitman and WJ (18-19)? So the WJ kids went from competing for three classroom's worth of spots with three other high schools, to three classroom's worth of spots with two other high schools. Sounds great for the Wj kids, unless one thinks that competing with Whitman and BCC kids is harder than competing with RM,Rockville and Wheaton kids. Which is exactly what the poster was arguing (and not some ridiculous offense of having a diverse program at Barnsley become even more diverse). I'm of the view that, at the very top. there are equally very strong kids at every ES, and with the small number of kids who are offered spots, it really doesn't matter. So maybe MCPS actually created more spots by keeping Barnsley at three CES classes for the remaining clusters. That's fine by me, and would be consistent with its stated policies.
Yup, that's exactly what they did.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No one said that.
What they said was it resulted in whites and Asians from WJ competing with whites and Asians from Whitman and BCC for CES spots - leaving Barnsley for more diverse populations.
Did the Barnsley CES program stay the same size, so that it's now just drawing from a smaller (and "more diverse") set of ES's - i.e., more spots for the ES schools that remained? And why would the person making that assertion even care about it unless they felt that it was now harder for students at WJ-cluster ES's to get into a CES program? If the same 28 kids from the WJ cluster who would have been Barnsley are now at CCES, what's the difference?
Of course they are arguing it's harder because they now now have to compete with "whites and Asians" rather than "more diverse populations."
Yes, Barnsley stayed the same size, three CES classes per grade.
So Barnsley, with three classes/grade, went from RM, Rockville, WJ and Wheaton (17-18) to RM, Rockville and Wheaton (18-19)? And CCES went from two classes for BCC and Whitman (17-18) to three classes for BCC, Whitman and WJ (18-19)? So the WJ kids went from competing for three classroom's worth of spots with three other high schools, to three classroom's worth of spots with two other high schools. Sounds great for the Wj kids, unless one thinks that competing with Whitman and BCC kids is harder than competing with RM,Rockville and Wheaton kids. Which is exactly what the poster was arguing (and not some ridiculous offense of having a diverse program at Barnsley become even more diverse). I'm of the view that, at the very top. there are equally very strong kids at every ES, and with the small number of kids who are offered spots, it really doesn't matter. So maybe MCPS actually created more spots by keeping Barnsley at three CES classes for the remaining clusters. That's fine by me, and would be consistent with its stated policies.
Anonymous wrote:No one said that.
What they said was it resulted in whites and Asians from WJ competing with whites and Asians from Whitman and BCC for CES spots - leaving Barnsley for more diverse populations.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No one said that.
What they said was it resulted in whites and Asians from WJ competing with whites and Asians from Whitman and BCC for CES spots - leaving Barnsley for more diverse populations.
Did the Barnsley CES program stay the same size, so that it's now just drawing from a smaller (and "more diverse") set of ES's - i.e., more spots for the ES schools that remained? And why would the person making that assertion even care about it unless they felt that it was now harder for students at WJ-cluster ES's to get into a CES program? If the same 28 kids from the WJ cluster who would have been Barnsley are now at CCES, what's the difference?
Of course they are arguing it's harder because they now now have to compete with "whites and Asians" rather than "more diverse populations."
Yes, Barnsley stayed the same size, three CES classes per grade.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No one said that.
What they said was it resulted in whites and Asians from WJ competing with whites and Asians from Whitman and BCC for CES spots - leaving Barnsley for more diverse populations.
Did the Barnsley CES program stay the same size, so that it's now just drawing from a smaller (and "more diverse") set of ES's - i.e., more spots for the ES schools that remained? And why would the person making that assertion even care about it unless they felt that it was now harder for students at WJ-cluster ES's to get into a CES program? If the same 28 kids from the WJ cluster who would have been Barnsley are now at CCES, what's the difference?
Of course they are arguing it's harder because they now now have to compete with "whites and Asians" rather than "more diverse populations."
Anonymous wrote:No one said that.
What they said was it resulted in whites and Asians from WJ competing with whites and Asians from Whitman and BCC for CES spots - leaving Barnsley for more diverse populations.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Their 6th grade classes were moved a long time ago. The WJ
schools are nowhere near Chevy Chase. Also, would you like to buy a bridge?
6th grade classes were still at CCES through 2017. That's a long time ago?
And the WJ cluster borders BCC and Whitman clusters, all of which now go to the Chevy Chase CES. WJ was also "nowhere near" Barnsley, some would say.
The bus ride is much longer to CCES than to Barnsley for many students from the WJ cluster.