Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Van Ness will have no trouble filling up--there are a ton of families in SW who don't see Amidon as an option, and don't have any closer OOB schools or charters starting in kindergarten. And since those homes are (at least currently) zoned for Wilson, they won't be particularly worried about feeder patterns out of Van Ness.
I would not count Amidon out since they have a very strong PTA this year. I know several families who are opting for Amidon and it appears that there is a contingency of folks in SW who want to see Amidon become a great neighborhood school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Comments in which there is an assertion that Lafayette is somehow on the "chopping block," references both positive and negative to the Lafayette parent group, and a comment about Lafayette not at risk of being redistricted do not constitute a "continuous thought." Perhaps you need to check your meds.
The fact that it is a continuous thread, and the subject was mentioned more than once does, in fact, indicate a continuous thought - obviously one too challenging for the angry drunk accusing people of being smartasses. Yes, a dumbass, indeed.
Anonymous wrote:Comments in which there is an assertion that Lafayette is somehow on the "chopping block," references both positive and negative to the Lafayette parent group, and a comment about Lafayette not at risk of being redistricted do not constitute a "continuous thought." Perhaps you need to check your meds.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The problem with this whole "fighting the boundary changes" is that is it not motivated on what is best for Brent, Ward 6 or the entire school system. Rather the motivation is for a small number of families to get a seat at Brent.
What is best for Brent is a smaller boundary for a couple of reasons. First, Brent can accommodate more OOB families. Second, Brent can better control class sizes while keeping the playground and great specials spaces. And third, families who did not get seats at Brent can be motivated to put in some good hard work at other elementary schools.
Many families went to Brent when Brent was a Title 1 school (and not really all that well run) and worked tirelessly to improve the school. This new/current preschool cohort can certainly do the same.
This exact same thing could be said of the small group of families advocating for SWS proximity preference.
+1. at brent the advocating families include many who spent their lifesavings on down payments for 700k+ homes in the school district so their kids could attend
Newsflash: everyone spends their savings on down payments for the best houses they can afford. This is not a phenomenon only relevant to families near Brent.![]()
Just goes to show that families renting IB may have outsmarted Brandon, Dave and all of their affluent white lawyer neighbors. The type A's at Lafayeete who are at norisk of being redistricted and thus losing their precious feeds to Deal and Wilson -- setting aside whether this is the gold standard to which to aspire -- are hardly a shing example to emulate. At least we are not being urged to sign meaningless petitions, yet.
2nd time I've read that on this thread and it continues to make no sense at all. For one thing, Lafayette is about a mile from Deal & Wilson. There is literally nowhere to redistrict them to, unless you can get Montgomery County to provide their feeder schools. There is only one other DCPS MS WotP, and that's Hardy, several miles away. There is no other HS. Before Lafayette were to lose Deal, both Shepherd and Eaton will be jettisoned first. And Wilson? The only schools closer to Wilson are Janney, Murch, and Hearst. EVERY other feeder will lose Wilson before Lafayette does.
I'm not a Lafayette parent, btw. I'm just baffled by someone's inability to look at a map and draw logical conclusions.
Hey smartass, which part of "at no risk" didn't you understand? I suppose if you graduated from some DCPS schools reading comprehension might be a challenge.
Anonymous wrote:If you knew SWS you'd see how ridiculous this commentary is. That little square would skyrocket property values and there'd be no citywide slots left in two years with sib preference.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The problem with this whole "fighting the boundary changes" is that is it not motivated on what is best for Brent, Ward 6 or the entire school system. Rather the motivation is for a small number of families to get a seat at Brent.
What is best for Brent is a smaller boundary for a couple of reasons. First, Brent can accommodate more OOB families. Second, Brent can better control class sizes while keeping the playground and great specials spaces. And third, families who did not get seats at Brent can be motivated to put in some good hard work at other elementary schools.
Many families went to Brent when Brent was a Title 1 school (and not really all that well run) and worked tirelessly to improve the school. This new/current preschool cohort can certainly do the same.
This exact same thing could be said of the small group of families advocating for SWS proximity preference.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The problem with this whole "fighting the boundary changes" is that is it not motivated on what is best for Brent, Ward 6 or the entire school system. Rather the motivation is for a small number of families to get a seat at Brent.
What is best for Brent is a smaller boundary for a couple of reasons. First, Brent can accommodate more OOB families. Second, Brent can better control class sizes while keeping the playground and great specials spaces. And third, families who did not get seats at Brent can be motivated to put in some good hard work at other elementary schools.
Many families went to Brent when Brent was a Title 1 school (and not really all that well run) and worked tirelessly to improve the school. This new/current preschool cohort can certainly do the same.
This exact same thing could be said of the small group of families advocating for SWS proximity preference.
+1. at brent the advocating families include many who spent their lifesavings on down payments for 700k+ homes in the school district so their kids could attend
Newsflash: everyone spends their savings on down payments for the best houses they can afford. This is not a phenomenon only relevant to families near Brent.![]()
Just goes to show that families renting IB may have outsmarted Brandon, Dave and all of their affluent white lawyer neighbors. The type A's at Lafayeete who are at norisk of being redistricted and thus losing their precious feeds to Deal and Wilson -- setting aside whether this is the gold standard to which to aspire -- are hardly a shing example to emulate. At least we are not being urged to sign meaningless petitions, yet.
2nd time I've read that on this thread and it continues to make no sense at all. For one thing, Lafayette is about a mile from Deal & Wilson. There is literally nowhere to redistrict them to, unless you can get Montgomery County to provide their feeder schools. There is only one other DCPS MS WotP, and that's Hardy, several miles away. There is no other HS. Before Lafayette were to lose Deal, both Shepherd and Eaton will be jettisoned first. And Wilson? The only schools closer to Wilson are Janney, Murch, and Hearst. EVERY other feeder will lose Wilson before Lafayette does.
I'm not a Lafayette parent, btw. I'm just baffled by someone's inability to look at a map and draw logical conclusions.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The problem with this whole "fighting the boundary changes" is that is it not motivated on what is best for Brent, Ward 6 or the entire school system. Rather the motivation is for a small number of families to get a seat at Brent.
What is best for Brent is a smaller boundary for a couple of reasons. First, Brent can accommodate more OOB families. Second, Brent can better control class sizes while keeping the playground and great specials spaces. And third, families who did not get seats at Brent can be motivated to put in some good hard work at other elementary schools.
Many families went to Brent when Brent was a Title 1 school (and not really all that well run) and worked tirelessly to improve the school. This new/current preschool cohort can certainly do the same.
This exact same thing could be said of the small group of families advocating for SWS proximity preference.
+1. at brent the advocating families include many who spent their lifesavings on down payments for 700k+ homes in the school district so their kids could attend
Newsflash: everyone spends their savings on down payments for the best houses they can afford. This is not a phenomenon only relevant to families near Brent.![]()
Just goes to show that families renting IB may have outsmarted Brandon, Dave and all of their affluent white lawyer neighbors. The type A's at Lafayeete who are at norisk of being redistricted and thus losing their precious feeds to Deal and Wilson -- setting aside whether this is the gold standard to which to aspire -- are hardly a shing example to emulate. At least we are not being urged to sign meaningless petitions, yet.
2nd time I've read that on this thread and it continues to make no sense at all. For one thing, Lafayette is about a mile from Deal & Wilson. There is literally nowhere to redistrict them to, unless you can get Montgomery County to provide their feeder schools. There is only one other DCPS MS WotP, and that's Hardy, several miles away. There is no other HS. Before Lafayette were to lose Deal, both Shepherd and Eaton will be jettisoned first. And Wilson? The only schools closer to Wilson are Janney, Murch, and Hearst. EVERY other feeder will lose Wilson before Lafayette does.
I'm not a Lafayette parent, btw. I'm just baffled by someone's inability to look at a map and draw logical conclusions.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The problem with this whole "fighting the boundary changes" is that is it not motivated on what is best for Brent, Ward 6 or the entire school system. Rather the motivation is for a small number of families to get a seat at Brent.
What is best for Brent is a smaller boundary for a couple of reasons. First, Brent can accommodate more OOB families. Second, Brent can better control class sizes while keeping the playground and great specials spaces. And third, families who did not get seats at Brent can be motivated to put in some good hard work at other elementary schools.
Many families went to Brent when Brent was a Title 1 school (and not really all that well run) and worked tirelessly to improve the school. This new/current preschool cohort can certainly do the same.
This exact same thing could be said of the small group of families advocating for SWS proximity preference.
+1. at brent the advocating families include many who spent their lifesavings on down payments for 700k+ homes in the school district so their kids could attend
Newsflash: everyone spends their savings on down payments for the best houses they can afford. This is not a phenomenon only relevant to families near Brent.![]()
Just goes to show that families renting IB may have outsmarted Brandon, Dave and all of their affluent white lawyer neighbors. The type A's at Lafayeete who are at norisk of being redistricted and thus losing their precious feeds to Deal and Wilson -- setting aside whether this is the gold standard to which to aspire -- are hardly a shing example to emulate. At least we are not being urged to sign meaningless petitions, yet.