Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Thanks for not being PC! Who in their right mind wants their child to attend a school where 80% of the population is FARMS and out of boundary? However, no one wants to admit that a predominately black school with impoverished students are the reasons they ignore Hine or the many other deplorable schools in Washington DC. People will make up all types of PC excuses instead of being honest. I'm black and there is no way in Hell I will send my children to Hine. There are reasons why parents flock to Deal, parochial, or private schools in DC. Even parents from non-affluent communities will prefer Deal over Hine. Affluent parents on The Hill have other options and Hine surely isn't one of them.
If we're done being politically correct, then let's not forget that these places that you flock to, the whites you encounter there in turn flock away from as the reality around them gets more diverse. Sad truth, I know. The irony: those whites who don't blink in the face of a little diversity benefit from it all. Meanwhile, you're missing out on good options for all the wrong reasons.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Neither IB families nor those in its feeder schools have to do the lottery. (Duh.)
No need for the snark. I haven't followed DCPS middle school lotteries before.
I still don't understand why Eliot Hine doesn't have more interest. They are going International Baccalaureate, its feeder schools are pushing hard for enrollment, they've got a marketing campaign ongoing, its feeder schools have improving test scores and increasing enrollment . . .
Hardy has a wait list of 131. Deal - which isn't even opening any of its slots up to out of bounds students - has a wait list of 136. Stuart Hobson has a waiting list of 79. Plus DCPS closed a couple of middle schools, and those students need to go somewhere.
If you can't get into Deal or hardy or Stuart Hobson, wouldn't Eliot Hine be the next school on your list? Why isn't it as popular is one might think it should be?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Thanks for not being PC! Who in their right mind wants their child to attend a school where 80% of the population is FARMS and out of boundary? However, no one wants to admit that a predominately black school with impoverished students are the reasons they ignore Hine or the many other deplorable schools in Washington DC. People will make up all types of PC excuses instead of being honest. I'm black and there is no way in Hell I will send my children to Hine. There are reasons why parents flock to Deal, parochial, or private schools in DC. Even parents from non-affluent communities will prefer Deal over Hine. Affluent parents on The Hill have other options and Hine surely isn't one of them.
If we're done being politically correct, then let's not forget that these places that you flock to, the whites you encounter there in turn flock away from as the reality around them gets more diverse. Sad truth, I know. The irony: those whites who don't blink in the face of a little diversity benefit from it all. Meanwhile, you're missing out on good options for all the wrong reasons.
No one is fleeing diversity. They are fleeing poverty, low expectations and poor performance. Good luck with that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Thanks for not being PC! Who in their right mind wants their child to attend a school where 80% of the population is FARMS and out of boundary? However, no one wants to admit that a predominately black school with impoverished students are the reasons they ignore Hine or the many other deplorable schools in Washington DC. People will make up all types of PC excuses instead of being honest. I'm black and there is no way in Hell I will send my children to Hine. There are reasons why parents flock to Deal, parochial, or private schools in DC. Even parents from non-affluent communities will prefer Deal over Hine. Affluent parents on The Hill have other options and Hine surely isn't one of them.
If we're done being politically correct, then let's not forget that these places that you flock to, the whites you encounter there in turn flock away from as the reality around them gets more diverse. Sad truth, I know. The irony: those whites who don't blink in the face of a little diversity benefit from it all. Meanwhile, you're missing out on good options for all the wrong reasons.
Anonymous wrote:Thanks for not being PC! Who in their right mind wants their child to attend a school where 80% of the population is FARMS and out of boundary? However, no one wants to admit that a predominately black school with impoverished students are the reasons they ignore Hine or the many other deplorable schools in Washington DC. People will make up all types of PC excuses instead of being honest. I'm black and there is no way in Hell I will send my children to Hine. There are reasons why parents flock to Deal, parochial, or private schools in DC. Even parents from non-affluent communities will prefer Deal over Hine. Affluent parents on The Hill have other options and Hine surely isn't one of them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Eliot Hine's budget for 2013-2014 will see a $684,778 decrease.
Eliot Hine's projected enrollment for 12-13 was 369. Eliot Hine's actual enrollment for 12-13 is 281.
Eliot Hine's projected enrollment for 13-14 is projected to decline to 271.
Where is the good news?
The good news is that this took care of a lot of the problems that plagued the school in 2011/12, when transitioning to a more student-centered environment and curriculum under brand new leadership that faced an excess of 50 students and not enough teachers. Eliot-Hine has it together, driven teachers, great team, fantastic IB coordinator, just an all around welcoming place to be. And I'm a fan of Mr. Birks, who runs EH radio station and teaches technology. And the fact of the matter is Eliot-Hine takes IB seriously, more so than Deal for instance. Students who come in with strong academics will be challenged at Eliot-Hine, I'm convinced of that and have done my part to check it out.
Not PP, I know, but whatever bitch is still bitching and race-baiting on these boards whenever EH floats to the top, girl, you're living in the past. Find yourself another past-time if watching TV all day bores you. Oh, and should you have forgotten since when you had kids that age, middleschoolers don't ride in strollers, they ride on bikes. Hope you're cool with that.
Anonymous wrote:Oh please! The school is 85% FARMS and 80% OOB. Do what you want with the curriculum. Without a test-in magnet program there, the largely upper-middle-class hill population can only ignore the place. The neighborhood in the immediate vicinity has far too much low-income housing to draw in families from the affluent West Hill. There are enough bad middle schools to go around. No point in bothering. No brainer.
Anonymous wrote:Eliot Hine's budget for 2013-2014 will see a $684,778 decrease.
Eliot Hine's projected enrollment for 12-13 was 369. Eliot Hine's actual enrollment for 12-13 is 281.
Eliot Hine's projected enrollment for 13-14 is projected to decline to 271.
Where is the good news?