Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My prediction: The list of the best schools in the city, at every level, will be increasingly dominated by charters.
And also the worst.
True. Meanwhile, DCPS will find clever new ways to dumb down things even more.
This! DCPS will find ways to slow the improvement of Eastern and other schools by declaring that in bounds buy-in must be slowed because [insert regressive race based talking point here].
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:MacArthur will be the top public high school in the city 10 years from now.
Really?! It seems so bad now. I constantly hear about fights and my friend's kids who go to MacArthur say they haven't seen the principal since the first day of school. I don't know...
Principal at McA is rarely seen. My kid says the last time she saw him was right before Halloween.
Why should she be seeing him regularly? The role of the principal isn’t managing the students. Grade level AP, definitely, but not the principal. He’s got a huge job building a new school (both literally and figuratively). He’s doing a fantastic job
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My prediction: The list of the best schools in the city, at every level, will be increasingly dominated by charters.
And also the worst.
True. Meanwhile, DCPS will find clever new ways to dumb down things even more.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Euclid will be a moderate success. The number of upper elementary students in central city (shaw, bloomingdale, eckington) is way up. Proximity will entice some of them to stay and try it.
Agree. But still, Cardozo will be a no for high school. Eastern and Coolidge will continue to improve slowly, but maybe faster if they hit a growth spurt.
The city will reboundary and maybe zone some kids out of Coolidge, CHEC middle, and other more crowded schools. Total enrollment decline will mitigate this but not entirely solve it. The huge number of elementary schools in Ward 8 will taper a bit due to lower enrollment. Having a clear process for mergers and acquisitions will help with that.
BASIS will continue to plod along with its boosters, and will at long last get its elementary school started in a high income area.
Stokes will go through a more obviously rocky time but as the only French school, people will rally and save it. Sojourner Truth will continue to impress. Latins will Latin and DCI will DCI. MV P St will sort out its issues but the lack of a DCI guarantee will continue to put people off in the upper grades.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My prediction: The list of the best schools in the city, at every level, will be increasingly dominated by charters.
Only for middle school.
DCPS is by far the leader for elementary. High School is split.
No for elementary EOTP. It’s the immersion charters. Families that don’t get in then settle for DCPS.
Nope. Definitely not true on Capitol Hill.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:MacArthur will be the top public high school in the city 10 years from now.
Really?! It seems so bad now. I constantly hear about fights and my friend's kids who go to MacArthur say they haven't seen the principal since the first day of school. I don't know...
Anonymous wrote:Euclid will be a moderate success. The number of upper elementary students in central city (shaw, bloomingdale, eckington) is way up. Proximity will entice some of them to stay and try it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My prediction: The list of the best schools in the city, at every level, will be increasingly dominated by charters.
Only for middle school.
DCPS is by far the leader for elementary. High School is split.
No for elementary EOTP. It’s the immersion charters. Families that don’t get in then settle for DCPS.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My prediction: The list of the best schools in the city, at every level, will be increasingly dominated by charters.
Only for middle school.
DCPS is by far the leader for elementary. High School is split.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:MacArthur will be the top public high school in the city 10 years from now.
Really?! It seems so bad now. I constantly hear about fights and my friend's kids who go to MacArthur say they haven't seen the principal since the first day of school. I don't know...
Principal at McA is rarely seen. My kid says the last time she saw him was right before Halloween.