Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Do these score make anyone else want to just flee DC? It's like we're trying so hard to get into a handful of supposedly HRCSs when their scores are actually not that great.
Yep. Makes moving seem like a no-brainer.
Not for me. I see more and more families with kids moving into our neighborhood and their dedication to their schools - both DCPS & HRCS. I also see the unfortunate effects of displacement of those in poverty - many rent are being forced to move to PG County. I see this happening faster than the research is reporting it. Barry Farms and Anacostia development is just one example. Yes, we are talking 5+ years out - but my PS3 child will likely be fine in 3rd grade and beyond.
Are you saying things will be a lot better in DCPS for your child because more middle class families are moving in and more poor families are moving out?
Person you're responding tohere. We don't make enough money to be middle class so I'm in the poor category that you're referencing. I don't mind my child being in class with rich or poor kids. BUT the discussion I joined was about high SES "leaving DC" after 3rd grade because the scores are so low. As a long-time DC resident, I know all too well the effects of high SES families abandoning DC and moving to the suburbs. If that happened again in a major wave, my child be affected (and so would many other children.)
But what I'm seeing in real life is actually opposite of what I see on this board. I see dedicated parents doing hard work at their neighborhood schools and they actually CARE about the kids. On DCUM, it seems like everyone is just focused on their child. Fine, I get it. But there are many parents who believe that helping their community is helping their child.
It's a completely different mindset that I see here. The "it's a no-brainer" to leave DC because of test scores is foreign to the folks that give a d***.