Anonymous wrote:The person who writes "just consider Basis, Latin, or DC" in response to your question never took the time to look more closely. That is understandable, if the goal is to place your bets on something that, on average, produces well educated and rounded kids, mostly because that's already who they have in the building. I recommend to go with what the first respondent said, namely to take a close look at the PARCC scores (not the averages but the details, advanced and how many and who) and then take those numbers and - blind as a bat - visit with schools to ask questions that are specific to your child, not arrogantly but factually ("what if a child"). Let them lay out to you how your child may progress through middle school making the best of it and how the methods they are using to differentiate in the classroom will be applied to your specific child.
Our child is at a Title I DCPS middle school, where only a few others are above level. After 3 weeks, based on baseline tests, the school called us and said, our child tested out of the math class and proposed to find a solution, just as they called the kids at the other end of the spectrum to put support in place. That's the kind of middle school you should look for. Note, we did not call and pester everyone, they called us. They did so based on test, metrics and data, not based on us telling them what a whip-smart kid we have. They found a solution that is working very well.
The lesson here is that you may be better off at a school with wide-ranging abilities than one that serves a more homogeneous body of students. The poster who says "look for private" may well have experienced that. This lazily teaching to the middle is more common in NW schools as well as in "popular" charter schools. Title I schools are just about never homogeneous, certainly not in middle school but they aren't all as good at differentiating as what we're experiencing, hence the importance of asking for details, from the principal, the instructional coaches, teachers.
Anonymous wrote:I don't understand the effectiveness of hundreds of dollars worth of tutoring a month. The time for learning and studying is during the day at school. What do kids testing well above the taught level do during the day, and how is it not harmful to them to cruise all day and wait for their private tutor to challenge them after school? Beyond the money that I don't have, I'm concerned about the balance, and the odd experience of school that kids would acquire this way.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’d recommend that you you look at affordable privates. Charter, DCPS, etc. all teach to the middle. There is nothing more disappointing than having advanced kids being stymied because a teacher is trying to kid the rest of the class to grade level. You can’t supplement an entire curriculum no matter what you do. DC’s lack of a magnet program is just sad. Just real advice from someone that just hit middle school.
Oh sure, all those affordable privates. We're Jewish and work for non-profits. We wouldn't be comfortable at "affordable" parochial schools running families around 20K a year, even if we could afford that kind of dough for two kids. We'll probably just move to the burbs.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’d recommend that you you look at affordable privates. Charter, DCPS, etc. all teach to the middle. There is nothing more disappointing than having advanced kids being stymied because a teacher is trying to kid the rest of the class to grade level. You can’t supplement an entire curriculum no matter what you do. DC’s lack of a magnet program is just sad. Just real advice from someone that just hit middle school.
Oh sure, all those affordable privates. We're Jewish and work for non-profits. We wouldn't be comfortable at "affordable" parochial schools running families around 20K a year, even if we could afford that kind of dough for two kids. We'll probably just move to the burbs.
Well I can save you time! Privatedont offer much differentiation either. We left private school because of this. Why pay a lot of money to have your child bored and working on unchallenging material?!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DCPS doesn’t do differentiation in English/Language Arts. I have kids at Deal and there is nothing for English. DCPS is uninterestedin serving kids at the upper end of the bell curve.
They don't at Deal - and that is consistent with the IB MYP curriculum. IBO schools do not track until high school. Deal did get permission to do the DCPS math sequence, rather than the IB-standard integrated math.
Other MS have offered some differentiation in humanities and social studies (Hardy, Stuart Hobson).
It's a myth that IBD schools following the MYP curriculum "don't track until high school." You've made this point on other threads and it's always nonsense. Where are you getting this from?
Five years ago, I taught at a public school following the MYP which offered two or three different levels of IBD classes in several subjects - English, math and science. The school is in NYC and is accredited by Geneva IB. There are private schools in DC offering MYP that track, including WIS.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’d recommend that you you look at affordable privates. Charter, DCPS, etc. all teach to the middle. There is nothing more disappointing than having advanced kids being stymied because a teacher is trying to kid the rest of the class to grade level. You can’t supplement an entire curriculum no matter what you do. DC’s lack of a magnet program is just sad. Just real advice from someone that just hit middle school.
Oh sure, all those affordable privates. We're Jewish and work for non-profits. We wouldn't be comfortable at "affordable" parochial schools running families around 20K a year, even if we could afford that kind of dough for two kids. We'll probably just move to the burbs.
Anonymous wrote:I’d recommend that you you look at affordable privates. Charter, DCPS, etc. all teach to the middle. There is nothing more disappointing than having advanced kids being stymied because a teacher is trying to kid the rest of the class to grade level. You can’t supplement an entire curriculum no matter what you do. DC’s lack of a magnet program is just sad. Just real advice from someone that just hit middle school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DCPS doesn’t do differentiation in English/Language Arts. I have kids at Deal and there is nothing for English. DCPS is uninterestedin serving kids at the upper end of the bell curve.
They don't at Deal - and that is consistent with the IB MYP curriculum. IBO schools do not track until high school. Deal did get permission to do the DCPS math sequence, rather than the IB-standard integrated math.
Other MS have offered some differentiation in humanities and social studies (Hardy, Stuart Hobson).
Anonymous wrote:DCPS doesn’t do differentiation in English/Language Arts. I have kids at Deal and there is nothing for English. DCPS is uninterestedin serving kids at the upper end of the bell curve.