Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Curious how this will affect the already-crowded Deal down the line. Unless these Hearst OOB kids were already in Deal feeders.
Not a particularly helpful or welcoming comment. OOB families are DC residents who also pay DC taxes and have every right to attend a DC public school where they were offered a slot through the DC public school lottery.
You must not have a kid at Deal
+1. Not thrilled that my IB kid will be spending the year learning in a mobile home while OOB kids will be in brand new classrooms. Especially after a year when the principal would not offer my IB kid an seat because others (mostly OOB) were a higher priority. Sorry.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Curious how this will affect the already-crowded Deal down the line. Unless these Hearst OOB kids were already in Deal feeders.
Not a particularly helpful or welcoming comment. OOB families are DC residents who also pay DC taxes and have every right to attend a DC public school where they were offered a slot through the DC public school lottery.
You must not have a kid at Deal
+1. Not thrilled that my IB kid will be spending the year learning in a mobile home while OOB kids will be in brand new classrooms. Especially after a year when the principal would not offer my IB kid an seat because others (mostly OOB) were a higher priority. Sorry.
They don’t separate classes by boundary. This is just you complaining
Of course they don’t. But filling the lower grades with OOB students has pushed the upper grades to trailers. The IB parents will smile in polite company with our new OOB friends while frequently checking their phone for emails from private school admissions offices.
That’s fine. Had kids at Hearst a long time and it was much better when it was majority OOB and the neighborhood families went private.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Curious how this will affect the already-crowded Deal down the line. Unless these Hearst OOB kids were already in Deal feeders.
Not a particularly helpful or welcoming comment. OOB families are DC residents who also pay DC taxes and have every right to attend a DC public school where they were offered a slot through the DC public school lottery.
You must not have a kid at Deal
+1. Not thrilled that my IB kid will be spending the year learning in a mobile home while OOB kids will be in brand new classrooms. Especially after a year when the principal would not offer my IB kid an seat because others (mostly OOB) were a higher priority. Sorry.
They don’t separate classes by boundary. This is just you complaining
Of course they don’t. But filling the lower grades with OOB students has pushed the upper grades to trailers. The IB parents will smile in polite company with our new OOB friends while frequently checking their phone for emails from private school admissions offices.
OK, so you're unhappy the school is filling the lower grades with OOB students. What are you recommending as an alternative?
Is your annoyance directed toward the school or the OOB families?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Curious how this will affect the already-crowded Deal down the line. Unless these Hearst OOB kids were already in Deal feeders.
Not a particularly helpful or welcoming comment. OOB families are DC residents who also pay DC taxes and have every right to attend a DC public school where they were offered a slot through the DC public school lottery.
You must not have a kid at Deal
+1. Not thrilled that my IB kid will be spending the year learning in a mobile home while OOB kids will be in brand new classrooms. Especially after a year when the principal would not offer my IB kid an seat because others (mostly OOB) were a higher priority. Sorry.
They don’t separate classes by boundary. This is just you complaining
Of course they don’t. But filling the lower grades with OOB students has pushed the upper grades to trailers. The IB parents will smile in polite company with our new OOB friends while frequently checking their phone for emails from private school admissions offices.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Curious how this will affect the already-crowded Deal down the line. Unless these Hearst OOB kids were already in Deal feeders.
Not a particularly helpful or welcoming comment. OOB families are DC residents who also pay DC taxes and have every right to attend a DC public school where they were offered a slot through the DC public school lottery.
You must not have a kid at Deal
+1. Not thrilled that my IB kid will be spending the year learning in a mobile home while OOB kids will be in brand new classrooms. Especially after a year when the principal would not offer my IB kid an seat because others (mostly OOB) were a higher priority. Sorry.
They don’t separate classes by boundary. This is just you complaining
Of course they don’t. But filling the lower grades with OOB students has pushed the upper grades to trailers. The IB parents will smile in polite company with our new OOB friends while frequently checking their phone for emails from private school admissions offices.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Curious how this will affect the already-crowded Deal down the line. Unless these Hearst OOB kids were already in Deal feeders.
Not a particularly helpful or welcoming comment. OOB families are DC residents who also pay DC taxes and have every right to attend a DC public school where they were offered a slot through the DC public school lottery.
You must not have a kid at Deal
+1. Not thrilled that my IB kid will be spending the year learning in a mobile home while OOB kids will be in brand new classrooms. Especially after a year when the principal would not offer my IB kid an seat because others (mostly OOB) were a higher priority. Sorry.
They don’t separate classes by boundary. This is just you complaining
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Curious how this will affect the already-crowded Deal down the line. Unless these Hearst OOB kids were already in Deal feeders.
Not a particularly helpful or welcoming comment. OOB families are DC residents who also pay DC taxes and have every right to attend a DC public school where they were offered a slot through the DC public school lottery.
You must not have a kid at Deal
+1. Not thrilled that my IB kid will be spending the year learning in a mobile home while OOB kids will be in brand new classrooms. Especially after a year when the principal would not offer my IB kid an seat because others (mostly OOB) were a higher priority. Sorry.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Curious how this will affect the already-crowded Deal down the line. Unless these Hearst OOB kids were already in Deal feeders.
Not a particularly helpful or welcoming comment. OOB families are DC residents who also pay DC taxes and have every right to attend a DC public school where they were offered a slot through the DC public school lottery.
You must not have a kid at Deal
Anonymous wrote:Hearst, Eaton or Mann? If given the chance where would you go? OOB, commute is equally bad for all three.
Anonymous wrote:I have had a child OOB, but I am curious why one would accept OOB in elementary if it necessitates trailers? Does that not mean the school is over capacity? Not sure why an OOB family would want that either?