Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Give me a break. Everyone in MCPS is bussed - it is not unique to RHPS. If you live in Bethesda, presumably you know this already since public school buses are all over the roads. So please find a new argument with some basis in reality! Or just concede that you have an irrational hysteria surrounding a school that happens to be 10 feet over the line into Silver Spring and has a relatively small proportion of kids of color and/or kids from less well-off households.
This comment was posted in response to my observation that Mont. Co. should either bus everyone or bus nobody, and that meaningful integration happens through magnets, not busing. I'm sure you mean well, but I am not one of the Bethesda parents. I live in the heart of Silver Spring and my daughter's elementary school has >60% FARMS. The notion that I'm experiencing "irrational hysteria" about a Silver Spring school and the population that feeds into that school makes me smile, because you've got it all wrong. I get it that you think the Bethesda parents are just turned off by a little diversity, and maybe you're right. I don't know them and I wasn't involved in the boundary study and all that it entailed. But let's be clear. NOT everyone in Montgomery County is bused.
In fact, very very few kids in Mont. Co. are bused. Busing is a term of art and does not refer to taking the bus. It refers to being transported away from your in-boundary school, something that poses a very real and seemingly unnecessary inconvenience to parents/families, whether rich or poor. And if it's going to be MCPS's policy to bus, then MCPS needs to implement that policy in an evenhanded and county-wide manner, and it needs to do so in a manner that will actually achieve diversity, not in a way that merges mostly rich with 100% rich schools. If you are really committed to integration through busing, maybe you need to acknowledge that Rosemary Hills' projected FARMS rate of just over 22% means that it will continue to be one of the most affluent elementary schools in the county. There are numerous Downcounty schools with FARMS rates in excess of 70, 80, and even 90%. Real integration through busing would require busing from Bethesda, Rosemary Hills etc. and pretty much from the entire Green Zone into these less-affluent neighborhoods. Do I think that's a good idea? No. Because there are more effective approaches than busing and split elementary schools. But at least under an all-out busing approach we wouldn't have to pretend that blending mostly rich with totally rich neighborhoods is accomplishing the type of integration our county still lacks. I don't think wanting the basic conveniences associated with an in-boundary school assignment makes a person a foe of diversity. I intuitively "get" what the Bethesda parents are saying, even though our circumstances and the demographics of our communities are much much different. I wish the parents of both schools well, and I get that all of you are just fighting for what is most important to you.