Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:[
Reform continued seamlessly under Gray - just as it would have under Fenty. Rhee's departure changed none of the policies she put in place. It's all about turning the schools into charters.
Some reform continued - anything but "seamlessly." What matters most is not a few well-chosen words, but making the very tough decisions that need to happen. You don't get two leading horses out (Fenty, Rhee) in the middle of the race, and then claim it is all the same.
Anonymous wrote: Oh puh-leeze!!
There are thousands of kids placed in charters by parents who are notproactive" in the least. They choose a charter because it's convenient, because their friends or neighbors' kids go there, because it's close to daycare, work, grandma's etc., because they consider it their "neighborhood" school, because they like the idea of language immersion (but have absolutely no intention of supporting it or exposing their kids to the culture), and certainly, if they do come and it's a terrible fit or their kid has massive special needs that are incompatible with the mission of the charter (e.g., the charter is inquiry or expeditionary-based and their kid is incapable of working in groups) they won't do what's best for their child and seek a better fit.
Don't kid yourself that the publics are a dumping ground.
How does this observation contradict my point, PP? If the charters lure away both the proactive parents and the parents who choose charters for convenience, DCPS will still suffer from declining enrollment. That's even better. There's little worth saving at DCPS.
Your point made the assertion that that somehow charters get a better group of kids and parents and my response was that they're the same.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
You're right, PP. Effective charter schools will lure proactive parents away from DCPS, accelerating its decline.
You suggest that that would be a bad thing. Perhaps it's a good thing, however. Perhaps all DC children should be educated by charter schools that cater to their needs. Perhaps there's nothing worth saving in DCPS.
Oh puh-leeze!!
There are thousands of kids placed in charters by parents who are notproactive" in the least. They choose a charter because it's convenient, because their friends or neighbors' kids go there, because it's close to daycare, work, grandma's etc., because they consider it their "neighborhood" school, because they like the idea of language immersion (but have absolutely no intention of supporting it or exposing their kids to the culture), and certainly, if they do come and it's a terrible fit or their kid has massive special needs that are incompatible with the mission of the charter (e.g., the charter is inquiry or expeditionary-based and their kid is incapable of working in groups) they won't do what's best for their child and seek a better fit.
Don't kid yourself that the publics are a dumping ground.
How does this observation contradict my point, PP? If the charters lure away both the proactive parents and the parents who choose charters for convenience, DCPS will still suffer from declining enrollment. That's even better. There's little worth saving at DCPS.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Really - I hadn't noticed that all other schools list the degrees and universities for all of its teaching staff but leave off years of teaching experience for some teachers the way BASIS does.
They don't - hardly any school does. Latin, for example, doesn't list years of teaching experience for ANY of their staff.
http://www.latinpcs.org/pages/Washington_Latin_PCS/About_Us/Faculty_and_Staff
DC Prep Edgewood Middle PCS only shows a similar level of detail as BASIS, many don't list years of experience.
http://www.dcprep.org/Edgewood_Middle_Campus/Team_Bios
And those are the top two charters (by CAS results).
For DCPS, many likewise don't list years of experience or much detail either.
For all anyone knows, based on the various school websites, that same faulty "inexperienced faculty" assumption could be made of virtually any school in the district. PP really didn't display any good evidence, reasoning or factchecking prior to posting this assumption that Basis has an inexperienced faculty, let alone any conclusions drawn beyond that.
BASIS is trying to sell itself into a new market as something special, with superior teachers , so it seems the only reason they wouldn't specifically mention teaching experience for all teachers is because it doesn't help their case.
The evidence provided is lack of complete info about teaching experience. Rather than defend BASIS based on incomplete evidence of their staff's teaching experience, why not ask them to list the teaching experience of all their teachers and see how they react.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
You're right, PP. Effective charter schools will lure proactive parents away from DCPS, accelerating its decline.
You suggest that that would be a bad thing. Perhaps it's a good thing, however. Perhaps all DC children should be educated by charter schools that cater to their needs. Perhaps there's nothing worth saving in DCPS.
Oh puh-leeze!!
There are thousands of kids placed in charters by parents who are notproactive" in the least. They choose a charter because it's convenient, because their friends or neighbors' kids go there, because it's close to daycare, work, grandma's etc., because they consider it their "neighborhood" school, because they like the idea of language immersion (but have absolutely no intention of supporting it or exposing their kids to the culture), and certainly, if they do come and it's a terrible fit or their kid has massive special needs that are incompatible with the mission of the charter (e.g., the charter is inquiry or expeditionary-based and their kid is incapable of working in groups) they won't do what's best for their child and seek a better fit.
Don't kid yourself that the publics are a dumping ground.
Anonymous wrote:[
Reform continued seamlessly under Gray - just as it would have under Fenty. Rhee's departure changed none of the policies she put in place. It's all about turning the schools into charters.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Gasp!! So exactly how many steps is that previous analogy removed from suggesting that "problem students" - or let's just say of this city's underachievers - should be treated like toxic waste? Maybe we should add scrubbers and filters (maybe we could go back to forcing infertility?), consider burying it with added layers of security (barbed wire maybe? let's make sure we set it up in a part of town that's not too precious, right?), and we'll certainly have to set up some process flow and tight regulations on where the remaining waste can be collected and discharged (maybe labeling and tracing it would be appropriate? the Germans had that sorted out pretty efficiently). Right, the next step would be burning it altogether.
The tragedy is that in fact that is what has been going on for decades, and when reform-minded people and charters come to at least TRY to fix it, they get shot down in a myriad ways by self-righteous yet clueless people like PP and most folks who voted for Gray vs. Fenty. Good job!
Reform continued seamlessly under Gray - just as it would have under Fenty. Rhee's departure changed none of the policies she put in place. It's all about turning the schools into charters.
Some reform continued - anything but "seamlessly." What matters most is not a few well-chosen words, but making the very tough decisions that need to happen. You don't get two leading horses out (Fenty, Rhee) in the middle of the race, and then claim it is all the same.
Anonymous wrote:[
You're right, PP. Effective charter schools will lure proactive parents away from DCPS, accelerating its decline.
You suggest that that would be a bad thing. Perhaps it's a good thing, however. Perhaps all DC children should be educated by charter schools that cater to their needs. Perhaps there's nothing worth saving in DCPS.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Gasp!! So exactly how many steps is that previous analogy removed from suggesting that "problem students" - or let's just say of this city's underachievers - should be treated like toxic waste? Maybe we should add scrubbers and filters (maybe we could go back to forcing infertility?), consider burying it with added layers of security (barbed wire maybe? let's make sure we set it up in a part of town that's not too precious, right?), and we'll certainly have to set up some process flow and tight regulations on where the remaining waste can be collected and discharged (maybe labeling and tracing it would be appropriate? the Germans had that sorted out pretty efficiently). Right, the next step would be burning it altogether.
The tragedy is that in fact that is what has been going on for decades, and when reform-minded people and charters come to at least TRY to fix it, they get shot down in a myriad ways by self-righteous yet clueless people like PP and most folks who voted for Gray vs. Fenty. Good job!
Reform continued seamlessly under Gray - just as it would have under Fenty. Rhee's departure changed none of the policies she put in place. It's all about turning the schools into charters.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Really - I hadn't noticed that all other schools list the degrees and universities for all of its teaching staff but leave off years of teaching experience for some teachers the way BASIS does.
They don't - hardly any school does. Latin, for example, doesn't list years of teaching experience for ANY of their staff.
http://www.latinpcs.org/pages/Washington_Latin_PCS/About_Us/Faculty_and_Staff
DC Prep Edgewood Middle PCS only shows a similar level of detail as BASIS, many don't list years of experience.
http://www.dcprep.org/Edgewood_Middle_Campus/Team_Bios
And those are the top two charters (by CAS results).
For DCPS, many likewise don't list years of experience or much detail either.
For all anyone knows, based on the various school websites, that same faulty "inexperienced faculty" assumption could be made of virtually any school in the district. PP really didn't display any good evidence, reasoning or factchecking prior to posting this assumption that Basis has an inexperienced faculty, let alone any conclusions drawn beyond that.
BASIS is trying to sell itself into a new market as something special, with superior teachers , so it seems the only reason they wouldn't specifically mention teaching experience for all teachers is because it doesn't help their case.
The evidence provided is lack of complete info about teaching experience. Rather than defend BASIS based on incomplete evidence of their staff's teaching experience, why not ask them to list the teaching experience of all their teachers and see how they react.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Gasp!! So exactly how many steps is that previous analogy removed from suggesting that "problem students" - or let's just say of this city's underachievers - should be treated like toxic waste? Maybe we should add scrubbers and filters (maybe we could go back to forcing infertility?), consider burying it with added layers of security (barbed wire maybe? let's make sure we set it up in a part of town that's not too precious, right?), and we'll certainly have to set up some process flow and tight regulations on where the remaining waste can be collected and discharged (maybe labeling and tracing it would be appropriate? the Germans had that sorted out pretty efficiently). Right, the next step would be burning it altogether.
The tragedy is that in fact that is what has been going on for decades, and when reform-minded people and charters come to at least TRY to fix it, they get shot down in a myriad ways by self-righteous yet clueless people like PP and most folks who voted for Gray vs. Fenty. Good job!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Really - I hadn't noticed that all other schools list the degrees and universities for all of its teaching staff but leave off years of teaching experience for some teachers the way BASIS does.
They don't - hardly any school does. Latin, for example, doesn't list years of teaching experience for ANY of their staff.
http://www.latinpcs.org/pages/Washington_Latin_PCS/About_Us/Faculty_and_Staff
DC Prep Edgewood Middle PCS only shows a similar level of detail as BASIS, many don't list years of experience.
http://www.dcprep.org/Edgewood_Middle_Campus/Team_Bios
And those are the top two charters (by CAS results).
For DCPS, many likewise don't list years of experience or much detail either.
For all anyone knows, based on the various school websites, that same faulty "inexperienced faculty" assumption could be made of virtually any school in the district. PP really didn't display any good evidence, reasoning or factchecking prior to posting this assumption that Basis has an inexperienced faculty, let alone any conclusions drawn beyond that.
Anonymous wrote:Gasp!! So exactly how many steps is that previous analogy removed from suggesting that "problem students" - or let's just say of this city's underachievers - should be treated like toxic waste? Maybe we should add scrubbers and filters (maybe we could go back to forcing infertility?), consider burying it with added layers of security (barbed wire maybe? let's make sure we set it up in a part of town that's not too precious, right?), and we'll certainly have to set up some process flow and tight regulations on where the remaining waste can be collected and discharged (maybe labeling and tracing it would be appropriate? the Germans had that sorted out pretty efficiently). Right, the next step would be burning it altogether.