Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, who I’m sure is a nice student. When I moved to Petworth in 2008, the first thing all of the long time families who had lived there for generations told me was that they knew all the trick and could help me get our kids out of the local public school.
Since the lottery, there are no tricks, and many in Petworth actually attend the local elementary these days.
Not really. You can see here the IB participation rate and it isn’t high for schools in Petworth.
https://dme.dc.gov/sites/default/files/dc/sites/dme/page_content/attachments/SY2122_Public%20School%20Enrollments%20per%20DCPS%20Boundary_0.xlsx
I am not as familiar with that neighborhood, but I believe Powell is in Petworth? 58% of their students are in boundary, and 65% of Barnard's students are in boundary. And both of these schools capture about 30-40% of the students that live in their boundary. In a city with a lot of school choice, that percent of neighborhood kids attending a school is on the higher end of average.
I realize that detail is not the point of this thread, but for the OP - if you want to understand the school landscape in DC, this website has a lot of great data (including that link above) https://edscape.dc.gov/
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, who I’m sure is a nice student. When I moved to Petworth in 2008, the first thing all of the long time families who had lived there for generations told me was that they knew all the trick and could help me get our kids out of the local public school.
Since the lottery, there are no tricks, and many in Petworth actually attend the local elementary these days.
Not really. You can see here the IB participation rate and it isn’t high for schools in Petworth.
https://dme.dc.gov/sites/default/files/dc/sites/dme/page_content/attachments/SY2122_Public%20School%20Enrollments%20per%20DCPS%20Boundary_0.xlsx
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, who I’m sure is a nice student. When I moved to Petworth in 2008, the first thing all of the long time families who had lived there for generations told me was that they knew all the trick and could help me get our kids out of the local public school.
Since the lottery, there are no tricks, and many in Petworth actually attend the local elementary these days.
Anonymous wrote:OP, who I’m sure is a nice student. When I moved to Petworth in 2008, the first thing all of the long time families who had lived there for generations told me was that they knew all the trick and could help me get our kids out of the local public school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes, charter schools are technically free, but they are distinct from public schools. There's DCPS and OSSE; they supervise public and charter schools, respectively. Some families choose their inbound public school; some go for charter schools in the lottery. Why are people harping on this? I can tell you that when I decided to send my kids to a charter, people said, "Oh, so you're not choosing your local public school."
Nice try but no.
Words mean something.
Charter schools are public schools the same way government contractors are federal agencies.
Anonymous wrote:Yes, charter schools are technically free, but they are distinct from public schools. There's DCPS and OSSE; they supervise public and charter schools, respectively. Some families choose their inbound public school; some go for charter schools in the lottery. Why are people harping on this? I can tell you that when I decided to send my kids to a charter, people said, "Oh, so you're not choosing your local public school."
Anonymous wrote:+1
Framing is messed up. You may also want to explore school choice in general: people applying to out of boundary DCPS schools as well.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes, charter schools are technically free, but they are distinct from public schools. There's DCPS and OSSE; they supervise public and charter schools, respectively. Some families choose their inbound public school; some go for charter schools in the lottery. Why are people harping on this? I can tell you that when I decided to send my kids to a charter, people said, "Oh, so you're not choosing your local public school."
Nice try but no.
Words mean something.
Charter schools are public schools the same way government contractors are federal agencies.
Congratulations!--that is the dumbest thing I have read on DCUM in years.
Why don't you learn how to use Google and learn something?
https://charterschoolcenter.ed.gov/what-charter-school
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes, charter schools are technically free, but they are distinct from public schools. There's DCPS and OSSE; they supervise public and charter schools, respectively. Some families choose their inbound public school; some go for charter schools in the lottery. Why are people harping on this? I can tell you that when I decided to send my kids to a charter, people said, "Oh, so you're not choosing your local public school."
Nice try but no.
Words mean something.
Charter schools are public schools the same way government contractors are federal agencies.
Anonymous wrote:Yes, charter schools are technically free, but they are distinct from public schools. There's DCPS and OSSE; they supervise public and charter schools, respectively. Some families choose their inbound public school; some go for charter schools in the lottery. Why are people harping on this? I can tell you that when I decided to send my kids to a charter, people said, "Oh, so you're not choosing your local public school."
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes, charter schools are technically free, but they are distinct from public schools. There's DCPS and OSSE; they supervise public and charter schools, respectively. Some families choose their inbound public school; some go for charter schools in the lottery. Why are people harping on this? I can tell you that when I decided to send my kids to a charter, people said, "Oh, so you're not choosing your local public school."
Nice try but no.
Words mean something.
Anonymous wrote:Yes, charter schools are technically free, but they are distinct from public schools. There's DCPS and OSSE; they supervise public and charter schools, respectively. Some families choose their inbound public school; some go for charter schools in the lottery. Why are people harping on this? I can tell you that when I decided to send my kids to a charter, people said, "Oh, so you're not choosing your local public school."
Anonymous wrote:Hello! I am a journalism student at George Washington University and I am working on a story for a class assignment about reasons why parents in DC choose to send their children to charter schools, rather than public schools, or private. Additionally, I am also looking to evaluate public opinions about DC charter schools as a whole. If you would be interested in partaking in a quick interview with me about your thoughts on this, or if you know anyone who would, please email me nikkighaemi@gwu.edu. Thanks!