Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP is spot on and a good anthropologist.
-- longtime DC resident-transplant and amused observer of the new group of young parents
if HIGH SES parents didn't have charter options we all would have continued the flight out of the city as soon as the kids hit Kindergarten. More are staying and guess what , our high incomes (Which seem to offend some of you clueless folks), cover a great deal of things you enjoy in this city. Want to go back in time to the late 80s as the city was going bankrupt? Your welcome.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wow. You're very mean.
New poster here.
Nope, OP is not mean, just honest.
Please, everyone, get real.
Charters are there for people who feel they need to avoid their neighborhood dcps schools. State the truth. Really, if you lived next door to a JKLM you wouldn't give a rat ass about a "Green World"or for your child to be in a montessori setting with kids of multiple ages in the same class. Be honest with yourself at least .
We lived inbounds for a JKLM and still go to a charter. I really think you don't know what you are talking about.
there are very, very few of you though. This is a fact that has remained constant for the past decade.
The only statistically significant exception to this is that not-seriously-wealthy parents of multiple children who are inbound for Key or Mann do, indeed, send kids to BASIS and Latin instead of Hardy.
But very, very, very few parents skip Murch, Mann, and Janney for Flavor of the Month elementary grade charters and schlep cross-town to do so.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wow. You're very mean.
New poster here.
Nope, OP is not mean, just honest.
Please, everyone, get real.
Charters are there for people who feel they need to avoid their neighborhood dcps schools. State the truth. Really, if you lived next door to a JKLM you wouldn't give a rat ass about a "Green World"or for your child to be in a montessori setting with kids of multiple ages in the same class. Be honest with yourself at least .
We lived inbounds for a JKLM and still go to a charter. I really think you don't know what you are talking about.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP is spot on and a good anthropologist.
-- longtime DC resident-transplant and amused observer of the new group of young parents
if HIGH SES parents didn't have charter options we all would have continued the flight out of the city as soon as the kids hit Kindergarten. More are staying and guess what , our high incomes (Which seem to offend some of you clueless folks), cover a great deal of things you enjoy in this city. Want to go back in time to the late 80s as the city was going bankrupt? Your welcome.
Anonymous wrote:OP is spot on and a good anthropologist.
-- longtime DC resident-transplant and amused observer of the new group of young parents
Anonymous wrote:OP is spot on and a good anthropologist.
-- longtime DC resident-transplant and amused observer of the new group of young parents
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wow. You're very mean.
New poster here.
Nope, OP is not mean, just honest.
Please, everyone, get real.
Charters are there for people who feel they need to avoid their neighborhood dcps schools. State the truth. Really, if you lived next door to a JKLM you wouldn't give a rat ass about a "Green World"or for your child to be in a montessori setting with kids of multiple ages in the same class. Be honest with yourself at least .
We lived inbounds for a JKLM and still go to a charter. I really think you don't know what you are talking about.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wow. You're very mean.
New poster here.
Nope, OP is not mean, just honest.
Please, everyone, get real.
Charters are there for people who feel they need to avoid their neighborhood dcps schools. State the truth. Really, if you lived next door to a JKLM you wouldn't give a rat ass about a "Green World"or for your child to be in a montessori setting with kids of multiple ages in the same class. Be honest with yourself at least .
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wow. You're very mean.
New poster here.
Nope, OP is not mean, just honest.
Please, everyone, get real.
Charters are there for people who feel they need to avoid their neighborhood dcps schools. State the truth. Really, if you lived next door to a JKLM you wouldn't give a rat ass about a "Green World"or for your child to be in a montessori setting with kids of multiple ages in the same class. Be honest with yourself at least .
Anonymous wrote:I think the Breakthrough Montessori people were fairly smart and strategic in their roll out. They know that Montessori is basically catnip for gentrifier parents and that there are a lot of those in Wards 1, 4 and 5. Putting BM east of the river would attract the parents down there who don't want to send their kids to DCPS and would rather not drive for 45-60 minutes every morning to get to Petworth. Both would be a win, but if you state on your application that you are going to recruit the gentrifier parents, you will make little progress. If you say you want to locate east of the river and recruit "motivated students" in Wards 7 and 8, you check off the "social justice" box. I'm not saying that it's not sincere, but cynically, I think that they made a plan that they'd win either way.
There will always be a market for Montessori. White people love it the same way that we love any other cult - Whole Foods, yoga, Uggs, whatever. It works well for some kids and less well for others, but it's never not going to be popular.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wow. You're very mean.
New poster here.
Nope, OP is not mean, just honest.
Please, everyone, get real.
Charters are there for people who feel they need to avoid their neighborhood dcps schools. State the truth. Really, if you lived next door to a JKLM you wouldn't give a rat ass about a "Green World"or for your child to be in a montessori setting with kids of multiple ages in the same class. Be honest with yourself at least .
Anonymous wrote:Wow. You're very mean.