Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Usually at risk kids are placed in schools through social services or guardians ad litum, not parents. And I'm pretty sure they can be and are placed without the lottery, at least in some cases, through the Student Placement Office.
I've heard of spots reserved in DCPS for those types of placements. Is the same true for Charter schools?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
As noted, I too suspect that's true - but that's not something that can be supported from this data. For that, you'd need to know where the kids are coming from, where they would have gone instead, the population that applies to charters, etc. You could get the exact same data here if all of the Ward 7 and 8 charters pulled 5 or 10% of their kids (not at risk) from other wards. They'd still be lower at risk percentages than surrounding schools but it wouldn't have anything to do with pulling not at risk kids from surrounding schools (and given that kids travel further to charters, you can't really compare the charter next door to a traditional school to that DCPS school and conclude anything about that DCPS school - kids leaving that DCPS school just as likely went to some other charter). Now, I'm guessing that's not what's happening (pulling lots of not at risk kids from other wards) in most cases - but my point is this data isn't going to tell you that. And it's dangerous to go around saying data proves things it doesn't. The authors are using the data to say charters a no less segregated (and I think quite possibly implying they're more segregated - hard to tell). They're not saying anything about the impact on DCPS at all (though I think that'd be useful to look at). From what I can see, charters are slightly less segregated overall compared to DCPS (based on fewer schools on the extremes), but I don't have the breakdowns I'd need to conclude that at all.
Exactly, the extremes at either end are the real problem- either schools that are vast majority at-risk (which is a recipe for disaster), or those that have close to zero at-risk (which are by their nature exclusionary). But the extremes are a symptom of the overall racial and economic segregation of the city, so pretty tough to combat without major policy changes. It would be interesting to consider the concept that by keeping more middle class families in the public school system (in theory), charters are lowering the overall percentage of at-risk kids in the public schools, and how that would affect all of these numbers. It's not like there were a lot of kids from well-off families at Stanton or Garfield before charters were around.
Here's my question- what percentage of at-risk kids causes middle class families to flee en masse? Based on the data, it looks like it's around 25%. Pretty much all of the "hot" charters which presumably appeal the most to middle class families are below that line.
Anonymous wrote:Usually at risk kids are placed in schools through social services or guardians ad litum, not parents. And I'm pretty sure they can be and are placed without the lottery, at least in some cases, through the Student Placement Office.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Usually at risk kids are placed in schools through social services or guardians ad litum, not parents. And I'm pretty sure they can be and are placed without the lottery, at least in some cases, through the Student Placement Office.
I've heard of spots reserved in DCPS for those types of placements. Is the same true for Charter schools?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Oh, redneck mom. Don't you have some frybread to make or something?
Sorry, I am too busy gentrifying DC so that it resembles the country we live in, not Nigeria, you know?
Generally it's not rednecks doing the gentrifying. They like their trailer parks and Walmarts too much and try to keep their distance from Whole Foods and dog parks. Plus there's nowhere in the city to park your oversized 4x4.
Anonymous wrote:Usually at risk kids are placed in schools through social services or guardians ad litum, not parents. And I'm pretty sure they can be and are placed without the lottery, at least in some cases, through the Student Placement Office.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Thanks for posting. As a data geek, this stuff is supremely interesting. I think it's key that they use the "at-risk" definition and not FARM. A family of 4 can earn up to $45,000 a year to qualify for FARM (reduced, not free, at that income level). That is obviously not a lot of money to live on in DC, but it's a very different world from a family scraping by on $15,000 a year from TANF and other forms of assistance.
Agreed that many of the "hot" charters don't have very high levels of at risk students. It's obvious from looking at the graph that the average line for charters is well below DCPS- this supports the general thesis that those who truly are the most at-risk are less likely to seek out charters.
But also note the 11 DCPS schools to the far left, all of which have at-risk numbers of 8% or less. Only one charter would be in that group- Yu Ying, at 4% at-risk. A school system solely based on a severely segregated residential housing pattern will continue to be severely segregated.
Hey data geek, what city are you talking about when you say that "A school system solely based on a severely segregated residential housing pattern will continue to be severely segregated"?
Hint -- please find and share these numbers...
In 2004,
# kids attending DCPS schools:
# kids attending DC charter schools:
In 2014,
# kids attending DCPS schools:
# kids attending DC charter schools:
Not the PP you are responding to but segregated public schools go hand in hand with segregated neighborhoods - because public schools tend to be neighborhood schools.
I'd suggest you check the demographic stats on charter schools - most of those are far less segregated than DCPS schools, because they are NOT neighborhood schools.
What's more, there's been a shifting demographic in DC, due to gentrification. Since people are no longer locked into only having one choice for their public school, that's making neighborhoods less segregated. And guess what - lo and behold, some of the public schools are gradually becoming less segregated now too.
This article/discussion is only about the sub-population of at risk students, not total demographics. The word segregation in the title line has the potential and possibly the intent to throw off the discussion.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Oh, redneck mom. Don't you have some frybread to make or something?
Sorry, I am too busy gentrifying DC so that it resembles the country we live in, not Nigeria, you know?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Thanks for posting. As a data geek, this stuff is supremely interesting. I think it's key that they use the "at-risk" definition and not FARM. A family of 4 can earn up to $45,000 a year to qualify for FARM (reduced, not free, at that income level). That is obviously not a lot of money to live on in DC, but it's a very different world from a family scraping by on $15,000 a year from TANF and other forms of assistance.
Agreed that many of the "hot" charters don't have very high levels of at risk students. It's obvious from looking at the graph that the average line for charters is well below DCPS- this supports the general thesis that those who truly are the most at-risk are less likely to seek out charters.
But also note the 11 DCPS schools to the far left, all of which have at-risk numbers of 8% or less. Only one charter would be in that group- Yu Ying, at 4% at-risk. A school system solely based on a severely segregated residential housing pattern will continue to be severely segregated.
Hey data geek, what city are you talking about when you say that "A school system solely based on a severely segregated residential housing pattern will continue to be severely segregated"?
Hint -- please find and share these numbers...
In 2004,
# kids attending DCPS schools:
# kids attending DC charter schools:
In 2014,
# kids attending DCPS schools:
# kids attending DC charter schools:
Not the PP you are responding to but segregated public schools go hand in hand with segregated neighborhoods - because public schools tend to be neighborhood schools.
I'd suggest you check the demographic stats on charter schools - most of those are far less segregated than DCPS schools, because they are NOT neighborhood schools.
What's more, there's been a shifting demographic in DC, due to gentrification. Since people are no longer locked into only having one choice for their public school, that's making neighborhoods less segregated. And guess what - lo and behold, some of the public schools are gradually becoming less segregated now too.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Thanks for posting. As a data geek, this stuff is supremely interesting. I think it's key that they use the "at-risk" definition and not FARM. A family of 4 can earn up to $45,000 a year to qualify for FARM (reduced, not free, at that income level). That is obviously not a lot of money to live on in DC, but it's a very different world from a family scraping by on $15,000 a year from TANF and other forms of assistance.
Agreed that many of the "hot" charters don't have very high levels of at risk students. It's obvious from looking at the graph that the average line for charters is well below DCPS- this supports the general thesis that those who truly are the most at-risk are less likely to seek out charters.
But also note the 11 DCPS schools to the far left, all of which have at-risk numbers of 8% or less. Only one charter would be in that group- Yu Ying, at 4% at-risk. A school system solely based on a severely segregated residential housing pattern will continue to be severely segregated.
Hey data geek, what city are you talking about when you say that "A school system solely based on a severely segregated residential housing pattern will continue to be severely segregated"?
Hint -- please find and share these numbers...
In 2004,
# kids attending DCPS schools:
# kids attending DC charter schools:
In 2014,
# kids attending DCPS schools:
# kids attending DC charter schools:
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Oh, redneck mom. Don't you have some frybread to make or something?
Sorry, I am too busy gentrifying DC so that it resembles the country we live in, not Nigeria, you know?
Anonymous wrote:Oh, redneck mom. Don't you have some frybread to make or something?
Anonymous wrote:Oh, redneck mom. Don't you have some frybread to make or something?