Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Some data from the MCPS schools at a glance website: in 10 years the district has gone from 22% free lunch to 34%.
Montgomery County has positioned themselves for only the rich who can afford private and don't need county services and the poor. They don't want the "middle" class/income families and are running them out.
I tend to agree except a lot of the rich are leaving as lower income families are moving into more expensive neighborhoods and making it work. I live in the WJ district and a Latino family bought a small rambler a few streets away. I am talking 1000 sq ft max at about $450K. They added a second level and a couple bump outs and now there are a couple more families (relatives?) living in there with them. Lots of older cars parked on the street. I would really think twice about where you purchase - so far the Potomac area and parts of bethesda seem to be safe - but everywhere else - you better like diversity and speak a couple other languages so you can communicate with your neighbors. No incentive for non English speaker adults to learn how to speak English.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Some data from the MCPS schools at a glance website: in 10 years the district has gone from 22% free lunch to 34%.
Montgomery County has positioned themselves for only the rich who can afford private and don't need county services and the poor. They don't want the "middle" class/income families and are running them out.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Some data from the MCPS schools at a glance website: in 10 years the district has gone from 22% free lunch to 34%.
Montgomery County has positioned themselves for only the rich who can afford private and don't need county services and the poor. They don't want the "middle" class/income families and are running them out.
Anonymous wrote:
Historic DC was pretty fancy too but the bulk of Montgomery County did not live in the painted lady's of yesteryear.Those were for the wealthy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Some data from the MCPS schools at a glance website: in 10 years the district has gone from 22% free lunch to 34%.
Montgomery County has positioned themselves for only the rich who can afford private and don't need county services and the poor. They don't want the "middle" class/income families and are running them out.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You are probably still reading now but you probably won't be for long, so let me sneak in this primer: It's a very large (150,000 students, 25 high schools), historically high-performing school district going through a lot of demographic change. It used to be a primarily white, upper-middle class suburban district. Along with the rest of the country it has become increasingly minority and, in some areas, lower income over the years. It is currently implementing what it calls "Curriculum 2.0," which is its brand of the Common Core that other states are adopting. Since it is such a large school district, schools differ tremendously demographically by where in the county you live. There is a large achievement gap along race and class lines. Housing prices tend to follow these lines as well, i.e. some very high performing schools with very high home prices, and many more modest homes with schools with more average performance. The country tries to allocate resources so the schools in the less wealthy areas have smaller class sizes in the early years to help improve outcomes.
Montgomery County was not historically an upper-middle class suburban school district. Many of the areas that comprise the county were, and still are mid- to lower-middle class and some areas were downright rural and poor. This is one of the myths that some people like to circulate about MoCo and is evident when you go outside of the Bethesda, Chevy Chase, Potomac areas. There is nothing upper middle class about much of Silver Spring, the original Takoma Park, Clarksburg, Gaithersburg and others. Real estate is every expensive here in the DC area but there is no need in convincing ourselves that those 1,000 square foot ramblers were upper middle class dwellings.
The original Takoma Park -- meaning the streetcar/railroad suburb -- was definitely fancy. Just look at the houses. Historic Clarksburg was a real town, with some fancy houses. Historic Gaithersburg was a real town, with some fancy houses. Conversely, the historic black communities go back to the end of the Civil War (and Montgomery County public schools were segregated by law until the early 1960s). Montgomery County was a place before the streetcar suburbs, and it was a place before the post-World War II suburbs.
And yes, those 1,000 square foot suburban ramblers were not for the upper middle class. But they were for the middle class.
Anonymous wrote:Some data from the MCPS schools at a glance website: in 10 years the district has gone from 22% free lunch to 34%.