Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Push Shepherd to Coolidge and the south part of the Coolidge catchment further south to the underenrolled schools, just like Hardy is being pushed south to MacA. There are plenty of open seats at existing schools.
Or instead of pushing anyone EOTP which the city has clearly stated they don't want, push another school in W3 to Hardy and MacArthur. Easier pull to swallow sending kids to equal performing schools don't you think? Unless you really are determined to make JR and Deal all white.
Push some EOTP students south and you’ll get a higher performing school. Unless you don’t want to go where there are so many OOB kids? Why is that?
I don't live in Shepherd Park but your logic makes zero sense and you know it. Shepherd's 40 kids will make zero difference at Coolidge (already at 100% capacity). So you'd need to send 250 kids from Coolidge to Brookland middle and Dunbar. Then you can send the 40 kids from Shepherd and the 200 kids from Lafayette. Yes. I agree, that could be tenable. But now you got an under-enrolled Deal and JR, same as Hardy and MacArthur. It would make more sense to take some kids from Janney and send them to Hardy and MacArthur.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Push Shepherd to Coolidge and the south part of the Coolidge catchment further south to the underenrolled schools, just like Hardy is being pushed south to MacA. There are plenty of open seats at existing schools.
Or instead of pushing anyone EOTP which the city has clearly stated they don't want, push another school in W3 to Hardy and MacArthur. Easier pull to swallow sending kids to equal performing schools don't you think? Unless you really are determined to make JR and Deal all white.
Push some EOTP students south and you’ll get a higher performing school. Unless you don’t want to go where there are so many OOB kids? Why is that?
I don't live in Shepherd Park but your logic makes zero sense and you know it. Shepherd's 40 kids will make zero difference at Coolidge (already at 100% capacity). So you'd need to send 250 kids from Coolidge to Brookland middle and Dunbar. Then you can send the 40 kids from Shepherd and the 200 kids from Lafayette. Yes. I agree, that could be tenable. But now you got an under-enrolled Deal and JR, same as Hardy and MacArthur. It would make more sense to take some kids from Janney and send them to Hardy and MacArthur.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Push Shepherd to Coolidge and the south part of the Coolidge catchment further south to the underenrolled schools, just like Hardy is being pushed south to MacA. There are plenty of open seats at existing schools.
Or instead of pushing anyone EOTP which the city has clearly stated they don't want, push another school in W3 to Hardy and MacArthur. Easier pull to swallow sending kids to equal performing schools don't you think? Unless you really are determined to make JR and Deal all white.
Push some EOTP students south and you’ll get a higher performing school. Unless you don’t want to go where there are so many OOB kids? Why is that?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Push Shepherd to Coolidge and the south part of the Coolidge catchment further south to the underenrolled schools, just like Hardy is being pushed south to MacA. There are plenty of open seats at existing schools.
Or instead of pushing anyone EOTP which the city has clearly stated they don't want, push another school in W3 to Hardy and MacArthur. Easier pull to swallow sending kids to equal performing schools don't you think? Unless you really are determined to make JR and Deal all white.
Anonymous wrote:Push Shepherd to Coolidge and the south part of the Coolidge catchment further south to the underenrolled schools, just like Hardy is being pushed south to MacA. There are plenty of open seats at existing schools.
Anonymous wrote:https://www.washingtonpost.com/education/2023/09/30/dc-school-boundary-study/
Bancroft and Shepherd parents getting called out, great. The Mt. Pleasant mother whose kids are in private school and whining b/c she may not be able to send her kids to J-R is super gross.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:.
What happens is that educated middle income parents who really need good public schools and can't afford private get shafted. Our needs don't ever rate because we're not important enough that we need to be satisfied and no politician gets virtue points for ensuring our children are stimulated and safe in school. We're the ones who get sent away with "your kids will be fine..."
100% right. And, as a former DCPS teacher in a Cap Hill middle school, that’s verbatim how admin and teachers discuss IB kids. There’s a reason I live in Virginia.
Public schools, especially DCPS, is like an emergency room in constant triage mode. Unless you’re bleeding out, we can’t pay attention to you. I hate it, but I had to approach it like that too.
So… *shrug*? Either sit in the waiting room with an ice pack or move bc it’s not changing anytime soon. Those attitudes are entrenched.
You hear this all of the time from CC and Shepard Park peeps - we earned our passport to Ward 3, Brightwood and Petworth - you’ll be fine, keep it moving. So it’s not just coming from the mayor.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:.
What happens is that educated middle income parents who really need good public schools and can't afford private get shafted. Our needs don't ever rate because we're not important enough that we need to be satisfied and no politician gets virtue points for ensuring our children are stimulated and safe in school. We're the ones who get sent away with "your kids will be fine..."
100% right. And, as a former DCPS teacher in a Cap Hill middle school, that’s verbatim how admin and teachers discuss IB kids. There’s a reason I live in Virginia.
Public schools, especially DCPS, is like an emergency room in constant triage mode. Unless you’re bleeding out, we can’t pay attention to you. I hate it, but I had to approach it like that too.
So… *shrug*? Either sit in the waiting room with an ice pack or move bc it’s not changing anytime soon. Those attitudes are entrenched.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:.
What happens is that educated middle income parents who really need good public schools and can't afford private get shafted. Our needs don't ever rate because we're not important enough that we need to be satisfied and no politician gets virtue points for ensuring our children are stimulated and safe in school. We're the ones who get sent away with "your kids will be fine..."
Anonymous wrote:.
Anonymous wrote:I think DC's mayor and her staff believe that she ignores the views of privilege hoarders to her peril. I think they are embarrassed to give in to segregationist views, but do so because they know how what these people really want.
The left-of-limousine liberals in DC say a lot, get listened to little, and I think DC government realizes they aren't here in big numbers, though they can vote in CMs like Lewis George.