Anonymous wrote:The only way DCPS can "force" people to go to other high schools is by economically gerrymandering a feeder pattern that is comprised of more than 80% households at or over median income for the DMV---which, for a family of 4--- is $126,000. This could actually be done in Capitol Hill, and, perhaps in upper NW to Roosevelt.
Then ensure that there are honors classes which have prerequisites to enrollment---none of this "honors for all" or "AP for everyone" BS. Adopt discipline policies that will remove disruptive children from the classroom and put them in in-school suspension or --for kids who are violent---transferring them out to a school designed to treat children who are struggling with those behaviors.
But none of those things will happen because the "woke" progressives who run education in this city will deem it "inequitable". The city could have created a very high performing middle school on the Hill in the last boundary redraw but instead chose not to---thus the continuous outflow of Hill kids to charters.
Thus we have multi-million dollar fully renovated high schools in this city (Dunbar, Coolidge, Cardozo) at substantial under capacity, with the middle and upper middle class parents of the city clamoring to be fed to Ward 3, gaming the system to get fed to Ward 3 OOB, or else directing their energies to a few charters. And if those options don't work out, those parents decamp to other jurisdictions or go private.
The failure to understand that parents (regardless of race or income) who care about their kids education will vote with their feet has never sunk in with the DCPS bureaucracy. Nor, apparently, has it sunk in with the Council.
Anonymous wrote:virtually all of upper-income DC east of Rock Creek Park either puts their kids in Wilson (but for a few private schools and charters) and that is a HUGE factor in its overcrowding. And a major reason why Wilson is overcrowded while, for example, Coolidge's enrollment is anemic and Cardozo's is situated in a hugely expensive neighborhood now and gets none of its neighbors' kids with incomes above the poverty line.
Those who want to maintain access to Wilson will always say BUT BUT BUT you have to keep access to Wilson to prevent the perpetuation of racism and segregation!!!! The underprivileged need Wilson. . . And that's the crutch that upper income families have used in, for example, Ward 4, to keep their kids in Wilson despite its overcrowding and obvious proximity to Roosevelt.
The way to let the problem resolve itself is to allow the mobility options to continue FOR THOSE WHO ARE AT-RISK, not those who simply figured out how to game the system, and DC thankfully has designated categories for whom that works.
Anonymous wrote:The only way DCPS can "force" people to go to other high schools is by economically gerrymandering a feeder pattern that is comprised of more than 80% households at or over median income for the DMV---which, for a family of 4--- is $126,000. This could actually be done in Capitol Hill, and, perhaps in upper NW to Roosevelt.
Then ensure that there are honors classes which have prerequisites to enrollment---none of this "honors for all" or "AP for everyone" BS. Adopt discipline policies that will remove disruptive children from the classroom and put them in in-school suspension or --for kids who are violent---transferring them out to a school designed to treat children who are struggling with those behaviors.
But none of those things will happen because the "woke" progressives who run education in this city will deem it "inequitable". The city could have created a very high performing middle school on the Hill in the last boundary redraw but instead chose not to---thus the continuous outflow of Hill kids to charters.
Thus we have multi-million dollar fully renovated high schools in this city (Dunbar, Coolidge, Cardozo) at substantial under capacity, with the middle and upper middle class parents of the city clamoring to be fed to Ward 3, gaming the system to get fed to Ward 3 OOB, or else directing their energies to a few charters. And if those options don't work out, those parents decamp to other jurisdictions or go private.
The failure to understand that parents (regardless of race or income) who care about their kids education will vote with their feet has never sunk in with the DCPS bureaucracy. Nor, apparently, has it sunk in with the Council.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yea. In 2030 maybe.
At least DCPS is finally acknowledging reality. They and the Mayor have been gaslighting parents about overcrowding in the Wilson catchment for at least the last decade. In 2017, I was in a community meeting with Bowser and she basically said WOTP doesn’t need another high school.
The headcount projections they are looking at must be huge. There’s a massive baby wave in Burleith right now.
Acknowledging the reality? I graduated from Wilson in 1996 and it was a known issue then. Let that sink in.
They’re going to need more middle schools too.
They are already planning to open another MS at the Old Hardy/Rec Center site on Foxhall Road
Anonymous wrote:To be clear, the powers that be will NEVER reduce the size of population. They may open up a new HS in Ward 3, but they will quickly overcrowd and add trailers to it. This exercise has nothing to do with appeasing Ward 3 families.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yea. In 2030 maybe.
At least DCPS is finally acknowledging reality. They and the Mayor have been gaslighting parents about overcrowding in the Wilson catchment for at least the last decade. In 2017, I was in a community meeting with Bowser and she basically said WOTP doesn’t need another high school.
The headcount projections they are looking at must be huge. There’s a massive baby wave in Burleith right now.
Acknowledging the reality? I graduated from Wilson in 1996 and it was a known issue then. Let that sink in.
They’re going to need more middle schools too.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yea. In 2030 maybe.
At least DCPS is finally acknowledging reality. They and the Mayor have been gaslighting parents about overcrowding in the Wilson catchment for at least the last decade. In 2017, I was in a community meeting with Bowser and she basically said WOTP doesn’t need another high school.
The headcount projections they are looking at must be huge. There’s a massive baby wave in Burleith right now.
Acknowledging the reality? I graduated from Wilson in 1996 and it was a known issue then. Let that sink in.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yea. In 2030 maybe.
At least DCPS is finally acknowledging reality. They and the Mayor have been gaslighting parents about overcrowding in the Wilson catchment for at least the last decade. In 2017, I was in a community meeting with Bowser and she basically said WOTP doesn’t need another high school.
The headcount projections they are looking at must be huge. There’s a massive baby wave in Burleith right now.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you move the current hardy ms to the old GDS - the commute for Eaton families will be very hard. You are going to redistribute some of janney to new Hardy. There are no bus options currently in play and metro will need to add lines.
By keeping hardy where it is - and opening a new high school - give kids who are in hardy and deal the option of where they want to enroll.
The gds location is hard to get to - and the neighborhood is not ready for an influx of teens
It's 11 minutes by car from Eaton. But yeah, if you're not driving there's no easy way.
Metro does run buses specifically for kids to school. See for example the "Deal Bus" on the Metro schedule. If they ran a bus from the Cleveland Park Metro the kids at Eaton would have a straight shot, and kids coming from elsewhere on the Metro would as well.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What’s needed is to get students from Wilson into other existing high schools. DCPS has plenty of real estate, just not the programming.
Meanwhile, try to get a bus to old GDS from anywhere but McArthur Blvd. It would mean middle school students could only get there by there parent’s driving, and HS students could only get there by driving themselves.
Which is why buying the building, without thinking about how it would be used, was such a waste of money.
The D6 goes from RFK to Sibley, it runs right past the school. It's a local bus, so it's slow, but it goes past a ton of Metro stations. A lot of people take it to Foggy Bottom and get on the Metro there.
Anonymous wrote:If you move the current hardy ms to the old GDS - the commute for Eaton families will be very hard. You are going to redistribute some of janney to new Hardy. There are no bus options currently in play and metro will need to add lines.
By keeping hardy where it is - and opening a new high school - give kids who are in hardy and deal the option of where they want to enroll.
The gds location is hard to get to - and the neighborhood is not ready for an influx of teens