Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:But I think I know why everyone on this particular board comes across as defensive and embittered.
We are all, somewhat, expected to justify not moving to the suburbs "for the good of our children," (or, as I like to think of it, move to the suburbs so our children can huff glue in a garage and drive drunk to prom and be abysmally bored), all the damn time. To everyone.
The myth of the suburban school experience is really strong. I never went to a suburban school myself (and I'm sure some immensely clever poster will chime in here about how they can tell that)--but I have to wonder. What, exactly, besides giant sports fields and parking lots, do these mythical burb schools have?
You'll aren't from here, are you?
-- MoCo "W" grad, with DCPS Ward 3 IB kids.
Some DC residents need to get out more. Not all of the suburban schools John Hughes movies.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:But I think I know why everyone on this particular board comes across as defensive and embittered.
We are all, somewhat, expected to justify not moving to the suburbs "for the good of our children," (or, as I like to think of it, move to the suburbs so our children can huff glue in a garage and drive drunk to prom and be abysmally bored), all the damn time. To everyone.
The myth of the suburban school experience is really strong. I never went to a suburban school myself (and I'm sure some immensely clever poster will chime in here about how they can tell that)--but I have to wonder. What, exactly, besides giant sports fields and parking lots, do these mythical burb schools have?
You'll aren't from here, are you?
-- MoCo "W" grad, with DCPS Ward 3 IB kids.
Anonymous wrote:But I think I know why everyone on this particular board comes across as defensive and embittered.
We are all, somewhat, expected to justify not moving to the suburbs "for the good of our children," (or, as I like to think of it, move to the suburbs so our children can huff glue in a garage and drive drunk to prom and be abysmally bored), all the damn time. To everyone.
The myth of the suburban school experience is really strong. I never went to a suburban school myself (and I'm sure some immensely clever poster will chime in here about how they can tell that)--but I have to wonder. What, exactly, besides giant sports fields and parking lots, do these mythical burb schools have?
Anonymous wrote:in the next 10 years Latinos will outnumber white teens in Moco HSs. Those schools will be so different...much browner and DC schools will be whiter. Not that these changes are negatives. It's just what is happening in our region.

Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:But I think I know why everyone on this particular board comes across as defensive and embittered.
We are all, somewhat, expected to justify not moving to the suburbs "for the good of our children," (or, as I like to think of it, move to the suburbs so our children can huff glue in a garage and drive drunk to prom and be abysmally bored), all the damn time. To everyone.
The myth of the suburban school experience is really strong. I never went to a suburban school myself (and I'm sure some immensely clever poster will chime in here about how they can tell that)--but I have to wonder. What, exactly, besides giant sports fields and parking lots, do these mythical burb schools have?
I can tell you what they don't have...they don't have a lot of minorities which is the very definition of a utopian society to a lotta folks.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Here is what my well-regarded suburban school district had that my IB DCPS does not:
* transportation to and from school
* vast majority of kids working on grade level
* well-supplied science labs
* many high school teachers with PhDs in their subject areas (not in education)
* full-time librarians and school nurses in every school every day
* a science research program in the high schools to help students enter Intel, Siemens, and other competitions
* instrumental and choral music starting in 3rd grade
* school calendars set several years in advance
* consistent aftercare program--same schedule and providers each year
* in-school suspension rooms with dedicated teachers in middle and high school, so kids could be disciplined if they affected other students, but could still keep up with their assignments
* relatively few children in foster care, with illiterate parents, or otherwise exposed to very challenging circumstances
* meals prepared in a cafeteria using some fresh ingredients (though we definitely had our share of frozen pizza, canned veggies, and chicken nuggets)
* shop and home ec classes. Darkrooms and kilns in each middle and high school.
* honors classes for English, history, math, and science beginning in 7th grade.
* a wide range of honors, AP, and elective classes (with schools bigger than anything in DC except Deal and Wilson, this was possible)
* a history of getting kids into Ivy League and other high-ranked schools (helped by teachers and staff who had attended such schools themselves)
* many more sports (bowling, lacrosse, gymnastics, field hockey, badminton, etc.)
And here's what DC has that my district did not:
* more access to museums and community resources
* more economic and racial diversity
* free PK, breakfast, and lunch
* beforecare
* bilingual options
* charters and OOB lotteries
* free public transit for schoolkids
* more opportunities outside the school system for kids to do extracurriculars
* overseas trips and school-run summer programs
* fancier school buildings
I think it's possible for DCPS to add some of the things that I loved about school as a kid (and some of them, like no school nurse, just boggle my mind). But some of it is about the income and education of the parents and that's not within DCPS' control.
I'm going to highlight the things my DCPS has on your suburban list. (I only know elementary so far, so can't speak to science labs etc)
Here are other things our DCPS has that suburban schools don't:
*smaller class sizes, much better student:teacher ratios
*Language instruction from K
*Prek4
*The ability to use PTA funds towards teachers/instruction
In short, DCPS is all over the place, but if you choose well, there isn't a difference.
And choosing well comes with a high financial price.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Here is what my well-regarded suburban school district had that my IB DCPS does not:
* transportation to and from school
* vast majority of kids working on grade level
* well-supplied science labs
* many high school teachers with PhDs in their subject areas (not in education)
* full-time librarians and school nurses in every school every day
* a science research program in the high schools to help students enter Intel, Siemens, and other competitions
* instrumental and choral music starting in 3rd grade
* school calendars set several years in advance
* consistent aftercare program--same schedule and providers each year
* in-school suspension rooms with dedicated teachers in middle and high school, so kids could be disciplined if they affected other students, but could still keep up with their assignments
* relatively few children in foster care, with illiterate parents, or otherwise exposed to very challenging circumstances
* meals prepared in a cafeteria using some fresh ingredients (though we definitely had our share of frozen pizza, canned veggies, and chicken nuggets)
* shop and home ec classes. Darkrooms and kilns in each middle and high school.
* honors classes for English, history, math, and science beginning in 7th grade.
* a wide range of honors, AP, and elective classes (with schools bigger than anything in DC except Deal and Wilson, this was possible)
* a history of getting kids into Ivy League and other high-ranked schools (helped by teachers and staff who had attended such schools themselves)
* many more sports (bowling, lacrosse, gymnastics, field hockey, badminton, etc.)
And here's what DC has that my district did not:
* more access to museums and community resources
* more economic and racial diversity
* free PK, breakfast, and lunch
* beforecare
* bilingual options
* charters and OOB lotteries
* free public transit for schoolkids
* more opportunities outside the school system for kids to do extracurriculars
* overseas trips and school-run summer programs
* fancier school buildings
I think it's possible for DCPS to add some of the things that I loved about school as a kid (and some of them, like no school nurse, just boggle my mind). But some of it is about the income and education of the parents and that's not within DCPS' control.
I'm going to highlight the things my DCPS has on your suburban list. (I only know elementary so far, so can't speak to science labs etc)
Here are other things our DCPS has that suburban schools don't:
*smaller class sizes, much better student:teacher ratios
*Language instruction from K
*Prek4
*The ability to use PTA funds towards teachers/instruction
In short, DCPS is all over the place, but if you choose well, there isn't a difference.
Anonymous wrote:What a lot of people want and get a suburban school is ease and peace of mind -- you buy a house and send your child to school. That's it, that's all the choice there is. And they're happy with it. There's no lottery, no charters, no stress about switching schools at K, 1st, 5th, middle school or high school.
People seem to tout the charters and lottery system of DC as a feature. It's a bug.
Anonymous wrote:Here is what my well-regarded suburban school district had that my IB DCPS does not:
* transportation to and from school
* vast majority of kids working on grade level
* well-supplied science labs
* many high school teachers with PhDs in their subject areas (not in education)
* full-time librarians and school nurses in every school every day
* a science research program in the high schools to help students enter Intel, Siemens, and other competitions
* instrumental and choral music starting in 3rd grade
* school calendars set several years in advance
* consistent aftercare program--same schedule and providers each year
* in-school suspension rooms with dedicated teachers in middle and high school, so kids could be disciplined if they affected other students, but could still keep up with their assignments
* relatively few children in foster care, with illiterate parents, or otherwise exposed to very challenging circumstances
* meals prepared in a cafeteria using some fresh ingredients (though we definitely had our share of frozen pizza, canned veggies, and chicken nuggets)
* shop and home ec classes. Darkrooms and kilns in each middle and high school.
* honors classes for English, history, math, and science beginning in 7th grade.
* a wide range of honors, AP, and elective classes (with schools bigger than anything in DC except Deal and Wilson, this was possible)
* a history of getting kids into Ivy League and other high-ranked schools (helped by teachers and staff who had attended such schools themselves)
* many more sports (bowling, lacrosse, gymnastics, field hockey, badminton, etc.)
And here's what DC has that my district did not:
* more access to museums and community resources
* more economic and racial diversity
* free PK, breakfast, and lunch
* beforecare
* bilingual options
* charters and OOB lotteries
* free public transit for schoolkids
* more opportunities outside the school system for kids to do extracurriculars
* overseas trips and school-run summer programs
* fancier school buildings
I think it's possible for DCPS to add some of the things that I loved about school as a kid (and some of them, like no school nurse, just boggle my mind). But some of it is about the income and education of the parents and that's not within DCPS' control.