Anonymous wrote:How can you not give preference to in-bound? That seems insane: every single student would be trekking across the city to a school far from their neighborhood that's randomly assigned. It's colossal waste of time and resources.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So would anyone be supportive of giving at-risk preference over IB students for Pk3 and Pk4 at DCPS, and at every grade for charters and city-wide schools?
I would. Any loss of opportunity to my kids would be small compared to the benefits to the at-risk kids and the system being more equitable overall. Free preschool for the affluent should not be a thing we spend money on.
I would too.
I would too. Most of the spots at the preferred PK3 and PK4 programs go to IB siblings. So currently those programs are a free perk not just for the affluent, but really for the affluent with multiple kids. Makes no sense. But then the key question is what to do at K when the at-risk kids added at PK and the other IB kids make the numbers untenable.
Redraw the boundaries.
Go to a city-wide lottery for all. However, the folks who bought $1M tiny, unrenovated center-hall Colonials to be in the Janney district won't take kindly if their kids are assigned to the Mayor Marion Barry Learning Center in Ward 8.
Once more with feeling:
See Oakland and SF on how city-wide lotteries turn out. See 2014 when a majority of parents in ALL WARDS said they didn't want it. Can we please put this idea to bed already?
Anonymous wrote:So would anyone be supportive of giving at-risk preference over IB students for Pk3 and Pk4 at DCPS, and at every grade for charters and city-wide schools?
Anonymous wrote:It’s the most efficient way to solve the problem of inequitable school quality.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So would anyone be supportive of giving at-risk preference over IB students for Pk3 and Pk4 at DCPS, and at every grade for charters and city-wide schools?
I would. Any loss of opportunity to my kids would be small compared to the benefits to the at-risk kids and the system being more equitable overall. Free preschool for the affluent should not be a thing we spend money on.
I would too.
I would too. Most of the spots at the preferred PK3 and PK4 programs go to IB siblings. So currently those programs are a free perk not just for the affluent, but really for the affluent with multiple kids. Makes no sense. But then the key question is what to do at K when the at-risk kids added at PK and the other IB kids make the numbers untenable.
Redraw the boundaries.
Go to a city-wide lottery for all. However, the folks who bought $1M tiny, unrenovated center-hall Colonials to be in the Janney district won't take kindly if their kids are assigned to the Mayor Marion Barry Learning Center in Ward 8.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So would anyone be supportive of giving at-risk preference over IB students for Pk3 and Pk4 at DCPS, and at every grade for charters and city-wide schools?
I would. Any loss of opportunity to my kids would be small compared to the benefits to the at-risk kids and the system being more equitable overall. Free preschool for the affluent should not be a thing we spend money on.
I would too.
I would too. Most of the spots at the preferred PK3 and PK4 programs go to IB siblings. So currently those programs are a free perk not just for the affluent, but really for the affluent with multiple kids. Makes no sense. But then the key question is what to do at K when the at-risk kids added at PK and the other IB kids make the numbers untenable.
Redraw the boundaries.
Anonymous wrote:So would anyone be supportive of giving at-risk preference over IB students for Pk3 and Pk4 at DCPS, and at every grade for charters and city-wide schools?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So would anyone be supportive of giving at-risk preference over IB students for Pk3 and Pk4 at DCPS, and at every grade for charters and city-wide schools?
I would. Any loss of opportunity to my kids would be small compared to the benefits to the at-risk kids and the system being more equitable overall. Free preschool for the affluent should not be a thing we spend money on.
I would too.
I would too. Most of the spots at the preferred PK3 and PK4 programs go to IB siblings. So currently those programs are a free perk not just for the affluent, but really for the affluent with multiple kids. Makes no sense. But then the key question is what to do at K when the at-risk kids added at PK and the other IB kids make the numbers untenable.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So would anyone be supportive of giving at-risk preference over IB students for Pk3 and Pk4 at DCPS, and at every grade for charters and city-wide schools?
I would. Any loss of opportunity to my kids would be small compared to the benefits to the at-risk kids and the system being more equitable overall. Free preschool for the affluent should not be a thing we spend money on.
I would too.
I would too. Most of the spots at the preferred PK3 and PK4 programs go to IB siblings. So currently those programs are a free perk not just for the affluent, but really for the affluent with multiple kids. Makes no sense. But then the key question is what to do at K when the at-risk kids added at PK and the other IB kids make the numbers untenable.
Redraw the boundaries.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So would anyone be supportive of giving at-risk preference over IB students for Pk3 and Pk4 at DCPS, and at every grade for charters and city-wide schools?
I would. Any loss of opportunity to my kids would be small compared to the benefits to the at-risk kids and the system being more equitable overall. Free preschool for the affluent should not be a thing we spend money on.
I would too.
I would too. Most of the spots at the preferred PK3 and PK4 programs go to IB siblings. So currently those programs are a free perk not just for the affluent, but really for the affluent with multiple kids. Makes no sense. But then the key question is what to do at K when the at-risk kids added at PK and the other IB kids make the numbers untenable.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So would anyone be supportive of giving at-risk preference over IB students for Pk3 and Pk4 at DCPS, and at every grade for charters and city-wide schools?
I would. Any loss of opportunity to my kids would be small compared to the benefits to the at-risk kids and the system being more equitable overall. Free preschool for the affluent should not be a thing we spend money on.
I would too.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So would anyone be supportive of giving at-risk preference over IB students for Pk3 and Pk4 at DCPS, and at every grade for charters and city-wide schools?
I would. Any loss of opportunity to my kids would be small compared to the benefits to the at-risk kids and the system being more equitable overall. Free preschool for the affluent should not be a thing we spend money on.
I would too.