Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Today: "Honey, on an annonymous listserv that is frequented by people with ample time on their hands and varied motives, LAMB came in with 12% of the vote! Guess we know where we're sending our darling!"
18 months from now: "well dear, we only got in to Sela. Guess we better jump on DCUM and talk it up :/"
People leave all of these schools in droves for "less" hot (in the subjective, striving, and/or myopic minds of the DCUM mob) charters, DCPS, and privates all of the time. LAMB packs up to 30 kids in a classroom - some thrive in this child-driven environment, others fail. Same at all of the mentioned schools. What of Bridges? What of Shining Stars? Appletree? Bethune is changing things up and Sela is doing well (put down the guns, haters). The assumption is that Stokes is a good school for everyone (it isn't) or that IT is challenging enough for all students (also nope). "Ranking" schools is BS. Everybody's snowflake is unique, folks!
I wonder, are you somehow related to the crazy Sela booster that Jeff already outed as a sock puppet and active manipulator of DCUM threads:
http://www.dcurbanmom.com/jforum/posts/list/120/327724.page
Because it is quite clear that the problem here wasn't some "haters," but a Sela booster gone wild in her attempts to hide the fact that the principal resigned the first week of school.
In any case, why are we even talking about Sela, a promising but literally new school, when OP is asking about "best 3-5 DC public charters"?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Today: "Honey, on an annonymous listserv that is frequented by people with ample time on their hands and varied motives, LAMB came in with 12% of the vote! Guess we know where we're sending our darling!"
18 months from now: "well dear, we only got in to Sela. Guess we better jump on DCUM and talk it up :/"
People leave all of these schools in droves for "less" hot (in the subjective, striving, and/or myopic minds of the DCUM mob) charters, DCPS, and privates all of the time. LAMB packs up to 30 kids in a classroom - some thrive in this child-driven environment, others fail. Same at all of the mentioned schools. What of Bridges? What of Shining Stars? Appletree? Bethune is changing things up and Sela is doing well (put down the guns, haters). The assumption is that Stokes is a good school for everyone (it isn't) or that IT is challenging enough for all students (also nope). "Ranking" schools is BS. Everybody's snowflake is unique, folks!
I wonder, are you somehow related to the crazy Sela booster that Jeff already outed as a sock puppet and active manipulator of DCUM threads:
http://www.dcurbanmom.com/jforum/posts/list/120/327724.page
Because it is quite clear that the problem here wasn't some "haters," but a Sela booster gone wild in her attempts to hide the fact that the principal resigned the first week of school.
In any case, why are we even talking about Sela, a promising but literally new school, when OP is asking about "best 3-5 DC public charters"?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Today: "Honey, on an annonymous listserv that is frequented by people with ample time on their hands and varied motives, LAMB came in with 12% of the vote! Guess we know where we're sending our darling!"
18 months from now: "well dear, we only got in to Sela. Guess we better jump on DCUM and talk it up :/"
People leave all of these schools in droves for "less" hot (in the subjective, striving, and/or myopic minds of the DCUM mob) charters, DCPS, and privates all of the time. LAMB packs up to 30 kids in a classroom - some thrive in this child-driven environment, others fail. Same at all of the mentioned schools. What of Bridges? What of Shining Stars? Appletree? Bethune is changing things up and Sela is doing well (put down the guns, haters). The assumption is that Stokes is a good school for everyone (it isn't) or that IT is challenging enough for all students (also nope). "Ranking" schools is BS. Everybody's snowflake is unique, folks!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Of the non-immersion schools, the ones that get a lot of love here are:
Bridges: small classes, inclusion school
Capital City: one of the oldest charters in DC, founded by parents, nice new facility with greenspace
Creative Minds: started by Stanley Greenspan's foundation, alternative learning, "International Curriculum"
Haynes: probably the most high-profile charter in DC, and most diverse, offers a year-round curriculum
Inspired Teaching: demonstration school of the Center for Inspired Teaching
Two Rivers: also parent founded by Capitol Hill families, expeditionary learning/project oriented curriculum
Incorrect about Haynes, it's #8 http://greatergreatereducation.org/post/19691/dcs-most-diverse-charter-schools/ also, why is "international curriculum" for CM in quotes?
Anonymous wrote:Of the non-immersion schools, the ones that get a lot of love here are:
Bridges: small classes, inclusion school
Capital City: one of the oldest charters in DC, founded by parents, nice new facility with greenspace
Creative Minds: started by Stanley Greenspan's foundation, alternative learning, "International Curriculum"
Haynes: probably the most high-profile charter in DC, and most diverse, offers a year-round curriculum
Inspired Teaching: demonstration school of the Center for Inspired Teaching
Two Rivers: also parent founded by Capitol Hill families, expeditionary learning/project oriented curriculum
Anonymous wrote:DCPCB ranks the charter schools into tiers: http://www.dcpcsb.org/PerformanceTier.aspx.
You could start your search with tier one schools. However, you will likely find schools that interest you beyond the Tier One's-- especially the AppleTrees.
Anonymous wrote:Mary McLeod Bethune in the Brookland neighborhood is also Spanish immersion PS3 throught 2nd grade. (After that they have daily Spanish class)
Classes are small for PS-3, PS-4 and K. There are 13 in my child's class, and the teacher is a native speaker. I believe there are 3 PS-3 classes. We are very happy at Bethune!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Today: "Honey, on an annonymous listserv that is frequented by people with ample time on their hands and varied motives, LAMB came in with 12% of the vote! Guess we know where we're sending our darling!"
18 months from now: "well dear, we only got in to Sela. Guess we better jump on DCUM and talk it up :/"
People leave all of these schools in droves for "less" hot (in the subjective, striving, and/or myopic minds of the DCUM mob) charters, DCPS, and privates all of the time. LAMB packs up to 30 kids in a classroom - some thrive in this child-driven environment, others fail. Same at all of the mentioned schools. What of Bridges? What of Shining Stars? Appletree? Bethune is changing things up and Sela is doing well (put down the guns, haters). The assumption is that Stokes is a good school for everyone (it isn't) or that IT is challenging enough for all students (also nope). "Ranking" schools is BS. Everybody's snowflake is unique, folks!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Today: "Honey, on an annonymous listserv that is frequented by people with ample time on their hands and varied motives, LAMB came in with 12% of the vote! Guess we know where we're sending our darling!"
18 months from now: "well dear, we only got in to Sela. Guess we better jump on DCUM and talk it up :/"
People leave all of these schools in droves for "less" hot (in the subjective, striving, and/or myopic minds of the DCUM mob) charters, DCPS, and privates all of the time. LAMB packs up to 30 kids in a classroom - some thrive in this child-driven environment, others fail. Same at all of the mentioned schools. What of Bridges? What of Shining Stars? Appletree? Bethune is changing things up and Sela is doing well (put down the guns, haters). The assumption is that Stokes is a good school for everyone (it isn't) or that IT is challenging enough for all students (also nope). "Ranking" schools is BS. Everybody's snowflake is unique, folks!
I have no dog in this fight so to speak, but as a parent of a Montessori educated child (not Spanish immersion Montessori like LAMB) I have to note that 30 is the target size for a Montessori classroom. It is a mixed age classroom and there are 3 teachers for 30 kids, that is the model.
LAMB has 2 teachers for 27 students......
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Today: "Honey, on an annonymous listserv that is frequented by people with ample time on their hands and varied motives, LAMB came in with 12% of the vote! Guess we know where we're sending our darling!"
18 months from now: "well dear, we only got in to Sela. Guess we better jump on DCUM and talk it up :/"
People leave all of these schools in droves for "less" hot (in the subjective, striving, and/or myopic minds of the DCUM mob) charters, DCPS, and privates all of the time. LAMB packs up to 30 kids in a classroom - some thrive in this child-driven environment, others fail. Same at all of the mentioned schools. What of Bridges? What of Shining Stars? Appletree? Bethune is changing things up and Sela is doing well (put down the guns, haters). The assumption is that Stokes is a good school for everyone (it isn't) or that IT is challenging enough for all students (also nope). "Ranking" schools is BS. Everybody's snowflake is unique, folks!
I have no dog in this fight so to speak, but as a parent of a Montessori educated child (not Spanish immersion Montessori like LAMB) I have to note that 30 is the target size for a Montessori classroom. It is a mixed age classroom and there are 3 teachers for 30 kids, that is the model.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Today: "Honey, on an annonymous listserv that is frequented by people with ample time on their hands and varied motives, LAMB came in with 12% of the vote! Guess we know where we're sending our darling!"
18 months from now: "well dear, we only got in to Sela. Guess we better jump on DCUM and talk it up :/"
People leave all of these schools in droves for "less" hot (in the subjective, striving, and/or myopic minds of the DCUM mob) charters, DCPS, and privates all of the time. LAMB packs up to 30 kids in a classroom - some thrive in this child-driven environment, others fail. Same at all of the mentioned schools. What of Bridges? What of Shining Stars? Appletree? Bethune is changing things up and Sela is doing well (put down the guns, haters). The assumption is that Stokes is a good school for everyone (it isn't) or that IT is challenging enough for all students (also nope). "Ranking" schools is BS. Everybody's snowflake is unique, folks!