Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you’re white, Ross is a good school. There is very little cultural diversity and the majority of the white families are racist and have anti-black sentiments. A friend of mine sent his kid to Ross and the white parents refused to let their kids play with that little boy because he is black.
Calling bullsh*t on this.
Ross/Dupont is one of the most progressive areas in the city.
I walk by the school everyday and see kids of all races playing together.
Yeah I'm a non-white person and I've only felt accepted.
The school does have a notably low at-risk population, like around 5 percent.
But the other families fall in a range, it's a dense neighborhood with lots of condo/apartment dwellers in addition to huge townhouse dwellers, so feels relatively down to earth.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you’re white, Ross is a good school. There is very little cultural diversity and the majority of the white families are racist and have anti-black sentiments. A friend of mine sent his kid to Ross and the white parents refused to let their kids play with that little boy because he is black.
Calling bullsh*t on this.
Ross/Dupont is one of the most progressive areas in the city.
I walk by the school everyday and see kids of all races playing together.
Yeah I'm a non-white person and I've only felt accepted.
The school does have a notably low at-risk population, like around 5 percent.
But the other families fall in a range, it's a dense neighborhood with lots of condo/apartment dwellers in addition to huge townhouse dwellers, so feels relatively down to earth.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you’re white, Ross is a good school. There is very little cultural diversity and the majority of the white families are racist and have anti-black sentiments. A friend of mine sent his kid to Ross and the white parents refused to let their kids play with that little boy because he is black.
Calling bullsh*t on this.
Ross/Dupont is one of the most progressive areas in the city.
I walk by the school everyday and see kids of all races playing together.
Anonymous wrote:If you’re white, Ross is a good school. There is very little cultural diversity and the majority of the white families are racist and have anti-black sentiments. A friend of mine sent his kid to Ross and the white parents refused to let their kids play with that little boy because he is black.
Anonymous wrote:Someone tangental, but it's crazy how much the Ross waitlist is moving for K and 1st. Our first grader has moved up 10 slots and our K has moved up 9.
Meanwhile, for Garrison (right next door!) neither grade has moved an inch.
Anonymous wrote:I haven’t had a child at Ross, but I know the principal, Holly Hurst. She’s a career educator who has worked in public and private schools. She also once ran a teacher education program. I’ve seen her navigate incredibly tricky situations with warmth and professionalism. While changing demographics certainly help Ross’s testing statistics, it is also true that the school has fantastic leadership.
Anonymous wrote:If you’re white, Ross is a good school. There is very little cultural diversity and the majority of the white families are racist and have anti-black sentiments. A friend of mine sent his kid to Ross and the white parents refused to let their kids play with that little boy because he is black.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Would welcome any specifics for folks joining the school at K/1. I know the demographics bolster test scores but curious to learn what special sauce there is beyond just plugged-in families. (MS/HS not a consideration since we will be moving after 5th).
I think the Ross special sauce relates to the ambitious principal, who has been there for maybe 15 years and turned the school into what it is now.
Some info:
https://thedcline.org/2019/10/17/ross-principal-credits-years-of-our-community-working-together-for-inclusion-as-one-of-dcs-five-national-blue-ribbon-schools/
The school also has an extra writing curriculum, so the kids learn how to write (persuasive essays, narratives) really properly. And I find it pretty low tech, compared to other DCPS schools.
The demographic influence may be because if you have a room full of kids with really involved parents, you can ask more of all the students.
Op here- this is very helpful. Thx for sharing!
I’m kind of puzzled about the lack of gym and cafeteria as mentioned by others below. Planning to call the school to learn more. I’m familiar with the outdoor facilities but didn’t realize how limited the building is.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Someone tangental, but it's crazy how much the Ross waitlist is moving for K and 1st. Our first grader has moved up 10 slots and our K has moved up 9.
Meanwhile, for Garrison (right next door!) neither grade has moved an inch.
Can confirm! But I’m sure Garrison will move eventually too. I wish Eaton or Hearst would budge a bit too but less optimistic on those.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Would welcome any specifics for folks joining the school at K/1. I know the demographics bolster test scores but curious to learn what special sauce there is beyond just plugged-in families. (MS/HS not a consideration since we will be moving after 5th).
I think the Ross special sauce relates to the ambitious principal, who has been there for maybe 15 years and turned the school into what it is now.
Some info:
https://thedcline.org/2019/10/17/ross-principal-credits-years-of-our-community-working-together-for-inclusion-as-one-of-dcs-five-national-blue-ribbon-schools/
The school also has an extra writing curriculum, so the kids learn how to write (persuasive essays, narratives) really properly. And I find it pretty low tech, compared to other DCPS schools.
The demographic influence may be because if you have a room full of kids with really involved parents, you can ask more of all the students.
Anonymous wrote:Someone tangental, but it's crazy how much the Ross waitlist is moving for K and 1st. Our first grader has moved up 10 slots and our K has moved up 9.
Meanwhile, for Garrison (right next door!) neither grade has moved an inch.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We lived on that block for years and moved for work reasons before our oldest entered K. It’s clearly a tight knit parent community and a sweet school. We have friends who are waitlisted now and live very close. One thing I never understood was how, for such a small school, so many MD families get away with enrolling their kids? Our parking was behind the house on that block, same side of the street, and multiple times per week we were blocked in by MD cars waiting for drop off or pick up. I tried to mind my own business, but if I ever asked them to move so I could get my car out, I was often sworn at. We are thinking of moving back to the neighborhood, and my youngest would still get 3 years there (beginning in ‘27). Is there still a large contingent of MD residents cheating the system?
I don't know a single family living in maryland (and it's a really small community, I know every single family in our grade). Still some OOB kids who came in through lottery spots, but no MD.
Ross used to have very little buy in from IB parents -- that's really changed in the last decade.