Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We are considering moving to DC and looking at Capitol Hill neighborhood-Specifically Brent for K. I understand this might be one of the largest K classes with possibility of 30 kids in a class. Is this normal for DCPS or just a bad year? That seems large to me and a bit concerning.
Keep in mind that you'll have to move by the time your child finishes 4th grade. There is no decent MS on the Hill, and the city is not interested in creating one.
Troll. Ignore.
Who's moving? We'll find a public alternative in DC, maybe BASIS, or Wash Latin campus #2, or DCI, or Two Rivers, or Stuart Hobson or Hardy if we lottery in OOB. Heck, we may even be OK with Jefferson Academy.
Move by the time your child finishes 4th grade is BS. This year's Brent 5th grade cohort has 3 dozen students, up from 9 just two years ago. The two Brent 5th grade teachers are excellent.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We are considering moving to DC and looking at Capitol Hill neighborhood-Specifically Brent for K. I understand this might be one of the largest K classes with possibility of 30 kids in a class. Is this normal for DCPS or just a bad year? That seems large to me and a bit concerning.
Keep in mind that you'll have to move by the time your child finishes 4th grade. There is no decent MS on the Hill, and the city is not interested in creating one.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We are considering moving to DC and looking at Capitol Hill neighborhood-Specifically Brent for K. I understand this might be one of the largest K classes with possibility of 30 kids in a class. Is this normal for DCPS or just a bad year? That seems large to me and a bit concerning.
Keep in mind that you'll have to move by the time your child finishes 4th grade. There is no decent MS on the Hill, and the city is not interested in creating one.
Anonymous wrote:While I'm sure Brent is great, this thread makes me appreciate SWS' relatively small class size: largest class thus far has had 21 kids.
Anonymous wrote:While I'm sure Brent is great, this thread makes me appreciate SWS' relatively small class size: largest class thus far has had 21 kids.
Anonymous wrote:We are considering moving to DC and looking at Capitol Hill neighborhood-Specifically Brent for K. I understand this might be one of the largest K classes with possibility of 30 kids in a class. Is this normal for DCPS or just a bad year? That seems large to me and a bit concerning.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We left after Brent Kindergarten 2 years ago as it was pretty chaotic at all times-classroom, recess, field trips -and were not impressed with the school. K is not a strong year at Brent, teachers are average at best although I hear the new principal is great. GL.
Take this comment with a grain of salt, PP.
K was a very strong year for us at Brent for the past two years. Both our older and younger children (spaced close together) had the new K teacher, who rocks. Things have improved at Brent since you bailed. The recess situation is much less chaotic. The weakest K teacher retired.
The K OOB WL is a mile long.
Hello, Brent is a public school. Let me guess, you left for a tony private because, let's face it, DC public schools are chaotic places for parents who don't want the best for their kids, or are slackers who can't afford privates.
Just goes to show how much opinions vary - we had the so-called "weakest" K teacher referenced above (who retired) and thought she was fantastic (head and shoulders above the other two).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The incoming K class is huge at all the Hill schools. It was a weird year.
There has been a massive influx of people and a baby boom on the Hill, starting about 6 years ago. The incoming K class won't be an outlier. DCPS reacts verrrry slowly to population changes.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We left after Brent Kindergarten 2 years ago as it was pretty chaotic at all times-classroom, recess, field trips -and were not impressed with the school. K is not a strong year at Brent, teachers are average at best although I hear the new principal is great. GL.
Take this comment with a grain of salt, PP.
K was a very strong year for us at Brent for the past two years. Both our older and younger children (spaced close together) had the new K teacher, who rocks. Things have improved at Brent since you bailed. The recess situation is much less chaotic. The weakest K teacher retired.
The K OOB WL is a mile long.
Hello, Brent is a public school. Let me guess, you left for a tony private because, let's face it, DC public schools are chaotic places for parents who don't want the best for their kids, or are slackers who can't afford privates.
Anonymous wrote:OP, just because the K classes are likely to be on the large side this fall doesn't mean that your child would be lost in the shuffle for K, or any other year at Brent.
PTA funds are used to hire half a dozen floating "teacher partners" (classroom aides) to improve the adult: kid ratio at least part of the school day. Some classes have full-time practice teachers on board. The higher you go in the school, the smaller the classes tend to be. Many parents work in the House of Representatives office buildings nearby, and some will return to their state when their Rep is voted out or whatever.
We haven't found that Brent is a disorganized school (and we could afford private). There are many strong teachers, including all the specials teachers. Brent offers more specials than most other public schools (Spanish, art, music, science, PE).
Good luck w/your choice.