Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:An unpopular opinion for DCUM- if the charters were properly funded the better ones would blow DCPS out of the water. So many struggle under the costs of facilities and teacher turn over from low salaries. If Charters had money to solve those problems the middling to good ones could be amazing.
+1 on this.
Also, Coolidge has a lot larger and better facilities than DCI which holds around the same number of high schoolers. Sports facilities in particular. DCI could have used the space next to it for a much-needed sports field, but townhouses are going up instead. Now the school is battling neighbors to try to use a nearby park for athletics. The charter schools can't just easily move and buy new buildings left and right, and they aren't provided with enough funds to truly utilize public and DC-owned space like Walter Reed. Meanwhile, there is no way that DCPS could serve all the kids currently in charters - if all of DCI changed to Coolidge overnight, for example.
DCI is approximately the same square footage as Anacostia High School, except DCI has 1,700 students and Anacostia has 250, and Anacostia High School is much, much nicer.
https://washingtonian.com/2014/02/03/anacostia-high-school-renovation-snags-design-award/
Right, this is a good illustration. The Coolidge comparison was simply meant to illustrate the same point in a nearby location.
Charter schools should not be defunded and indeed should be helped to better facilities when they outperform and outenroll.
The city spent $130 million building a pool at Roosevelt High School, a school with one of the lowest take-up rates among in-boundary children in the city. The entire annual budget of DCI is about $45 million.
That pool can also be used by all city residents including charter school students. What's your point?
This. What a weird thing to complain about. It's fine if some schools have pools and pools cost money, but they're for everyone. I go to the Dunbar pool all the time myself.
Seems like a pretty glaring example of the funding disparities between charters and DCPS. Some of these charter schools don't even have gyms.
It's more like DCPS is more connected with other DCPS and other city services than charters are, in a way that makes it difficult to do an apples to apples comparison of this stuff.
Please. Open your eyes and use your brain. Half the kids in this city go to DCPS. Half go to charters. If they go to DCPS, the facilities are lavish -- so lavish many schools win design awards. They go to schools that have Olympic sized pools, even if the school doesn't have enough kids interested in swimming to field a swim team. And the teachers are among the highest paid in the country. If the kids go to charters, the facilities are outdated, cramped and sometimes outright decrepit. And the teachers work for a fraction of what DCPS pays. And it's all because the city actively discriminates against children based on which school they happen to attend. It's indefensible.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:An unpopular opinion for DCUM- if the charters were properly funded the better ones would blow DCPS out of the water. So many struggle under the costs of facilities and teacher turn over from low salaries. If Charters had money to solve those problems the middling to good ones could be amazing.
+1 on this.
Also, Coolidge has a lot larger and better facilities than DCI which holds around the same number of high schoolers. Sports facilities in particular. DCI could have used the space next to it for a much-needed sports field, but townhouses are going up instead. Now the school is battling neighbors to try to use a nearby park for athletics. The charter schools can't just easily move and buy new buildings left and right, and they aren't provided with enough funds to truly utilize public and DC-owned space like Walter Reed. Meanwhile, there is no way that DCPS could serve all the kids currently in charters - if all of DCI changed to Coolidge overnight, for example.
DCI is approximately the same square footage as Anacostia High School, except DCI has 1,700 students and Anacostia has 250, and Anacostia High School is much, much nicer.
https://washingtonian.com/2014/02/03/anacostia-high-school-renovation-snags-design-award/
Right, this is a good illustration. The Coolidge comparison was simply meant to illustrate the same point in a nearby location.
Charter schools should not be defunded and indeed should be helped to better facilities when they outperform and outenroll.
The city spent $130 million building a pool at Roosevelt High School, a school with one of the lowest take-up rates among in-boundary children in the city. The entire annual budget of DCI is about $45 million.
That pool can also be used by all city residents including charter school students. What's your point?
This. What a weird thing to complain about. It's fine if some schools have pools and pools cost money, but they're for everyone. I go to the Dunbar pool all the time myself.
Seems like a pretty glaring example of the funding disparities between charters and DCPS. Some of these charter schools don't even have gyms.
It's more like DCPS is more connected with other DCPS and other city services than charters are, in a way that makes it difficult to do an apples to apples comparison of this stuff.
Please. Open your eyes and use your brain. Half the kids in this city go to DCPS. Half go to charters. If they go to DCPS, the facilities are lavish -- so lavish many schools win design awards. They go to schools that have Olympic sized pools, even if the school doesn't have enough kids interested in swimming to field a swim team. And the teachers are among the highest paid in the country. If the kids go to charters, the facilities are outdated, cramped and sometimes outright decrepit. And the teachers work for a fraction of what DCPS pays. And it's all because the city actively discriminates against children based on which school they happen to attend. It's indefensible.
Tour Yu Ying and get back to us.
Roosevelt's pool cost four times as much as that entire buidling.
K, but it isn't for Roosevelt's exclusive use.
Yes, it's open from 6:15am to 6:45am every other Tuesday, so clearly it's for the entire city.
Must you spread misinformation? DPR website says this:
Monday - Friday: 6 am - 9 am & 5 pm - 9 pm
Saturday & Sunday: Closed
I don't know the daytime schedule but others have said that other school programs use it. Also when there are swim meets, kids from other schools are using it, right?
I think they were making fun because it's closed on the weekends, and also closed whenever school is open, so the times when the public can actually use it are extremely limited.
Ha ha, so funny, only 35 hours a week so basically nothing.
Have you been there? No one uses it. It's almost always empty. Maybe if they were open when people actually want to go there....
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:An unpopular opinion for DCUM- if the charters were properly funded the better ones would blow DCPS out of the water. So many struggle under the costs of facilities and teacher turn over from low salaries. If Charters had money to solve those problems the middling to good ones could be amazing.
+1 on this.
Also, Coolidge has a lot larger and better facilities than DCI which holds around the same number of high schoolers. Sports facilities in particular. DCI could have used the space next to it for a much-needed sports field, but townhouses are going up instead. Now the school is battling neighbors to try to use a nearby park for athletics. The charter schools can't just easily move and buy new buildings left and right, and they aren't provided with enough funds to truly utilize public and DC-owned space like Walter Reed. Meanwhile, there is no way that DCPS could serve all the kids currently in charters - if all of DCI changed to Coolidge overnight, for example.
DCI is approximately the same square footage as Anacostia High School, except DCI has 1,700 students and Anacostia has 250, and Anacostia High School is much, much nicer.
https://washingtonian.com/2014/02/03/anacostia-high-school-renovation-snags-design-award/
Right, this is a good illustration. The Coolidge comparison was simply meant to illustrate the same point in a nearby location.
Charter schools should not be defunded and indeed should be helped to better facilities when they outperform and outenroll.
The city spent $130 million building a pool at Roosevelt High School, a school with one of the lowest take-up rates among in-boundary children in the city. The entire annual budget of DCI is about $45 million.
That pool can also be used by all city residents including charter school students. What's your point?
This. What a weird thing to complain about. It's fine if some schools have pools and pools cost money, but they're for everyone. I go to the Dunbar pool all the time myself.
Seems like a pretty glaring example of the funding disparities between charters and DCPS. Some of these charter schools don't even have gyms.
It's more like DCPS is more connected with other DCPS and other city services than charters are, in a way that makes it difficult to do an apples to apples comparison of this stuff.
Please. Open your eyes and use your brain. Half the kids in this city go to DCPS. Half go to charters. If they go to DCPS, the facilities are lavish -- so lavish many schools win design awards. They go to schools that have Olympic sized pools, even if the school doesn't have enough kids interested in swimming to field a swim team. And the teachers are among the highest paid in the country. If the kids go to charters, the facilities are outdated, cramped and sometimes outright decrepit. And the teachers work for a fraction of what DCPS pays. And it's all because the city actively discriminates against children based on which school they happen to attend. It's indefensible.
Tour Yu Ying and get back to us.
Roosevelt's pool cost four times as much as that entire buidling.
K, but it isn't for Roosevelt's exclusive use.
Yes, it's open from 6:15am to 6:45am every other Tuesday, so clearly it's for the entire city.
Must you spread misinformation? DPR website says this:
Monday - Friday: 6 am - 9 am & 5 pm - 9 pm
Saturday & Sunday: Closed
I don't know the daytime schedule but others have said that other school programs use it. Also when there are swim meets, kids from other schools are using it, right?
I think they were making fun because it's closed on the weekends, and also closed whenever school is open, so the times when the public can actually use it are extremely limited.
Ha ha, so funny, only 35 hours a week so basically nothing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:An unpopular opinion for DCUM- if the charters were properly funded the better ones would blow DCPS out of the water. So many struggle under the costs of facilities and teacher turn over from low salaries. If Charters had money to solve those problems the middling to good ones could be amazing.
+1 on this.
Also, Coolidge has a lot larger and better facilities than DCI which holds around the same number of high schoolers. Sports facilities in particular. DCI could have used the space next to it for a much-needed sports field, but townhouses are going up instead. Now the school is battling neighbors to try to use a nearby park for athletics. The charter schools can't just easily move and buy new buildings left and right, and they aren't provided with enough funds to truly utilize public and DC-owned space like Walter Reed. Meanwhile, there is no way that DCPS could serve all the kids currently in charters - if all of DCI changed to Coolidge overnight, for example.
DCI is approximately the same square footage as Anacostia High School, except DCI has 1,700 students and Anacostia has 250, and Anacostia High School is much, much nicer.
https://washingtonian.com/2014/02/03/anacostia-high-school-renovation-snags-design-award/
Right, this is a good illustration. The Coolidge comparison was simply meant to illustrate the same point in a nearby location.
Charter schools should not be defunded and indeed should be helped to better facilities when they outperform and outenroll.
The city spent $130 million building a pool at Roosevelt High School, a school with one of the lowest take-up rates among in-boundary children in the city. The entire annual budget of DCI is about $45 million.
That pool can also be used by all city residents including charter school students. What's your point?
This. What a weird thing to complain about. It's fine if some schools have pools and pools cost money, but they're for everyone. I go to the Dunbar pool all the time myself.
Seems like a pretty glaring example of the funding disparities between charters and DCPS. Some of these charter schools don't even have gyms.
It's more like DCPS is more connected with other DCPS and other city services than charters are, in a way that makes it difficult to do an apples to apples comparison of this stuff.
Please. Open your eyes and use your brain. Half the kids in this city go to DCPS. Half go to charters. If they go to DCPS, the facilities are lavish -- so lavish many schools win design awards. They go to schools that have Olympic sized pools, even if the school doesn't have enough kids interested in swimming to field a swim team. And the teachers are among the highest paid in the country. If the kids go to charters, the facilities are outdated, cramped and sometimes outright decrepit. And the teachers work for a fraction of what DCPS pays. And it's all because the city actively discriminates against children based on which school they happen to attend. It's indefensible.
Tour Yu Ying and get back to us.
Roosevelt's pool cost four times as much as that entire buidling.
K, but it isn't for Roosevelt's exclusive use.
Yes, it's open from 6:15am to 6:45am every other Tuesday, so clearly it's for the entire city.
Must you spread misinformation? DPR website says this:
Monday - Friday: 6 am - 9 am & 5 pm - 9 pm
Saturday & Sunday: Closed
I don't know the daytime schedule but others have said that other school programs use it. Also when there are swim meets, kids from other schools are using it, right?
I think they were making fun because it's closed on the weekends, and also closed whenever school is open, so the times when the public can actually use it are extremely limited.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:An unpopular opinion for DCUM- if the charters were properly funded the better ones would blow DCPS out of the water. So many struggle under the costs of facilities and teacher turn over from low salaries. If Charters had money to solve those problems the middling to good ones could be amazing.
+1 on this.
Also, Coolidge has a lot larger and better facilities than DCI which holds around the same number of high schoolers. Sports facilities in particular. DCI could have used the space next to it for a much-needed sports field, but townhouses are going up instead. Now the school is battling neighbors to try to use a nearby park for athletics. The charter schools can't just easily move and buy new buildings left and right, and they aren't provided with enough funds to truly utilize public and DC-owned space like Walter Reed. Meanwhile, there is no way that DCPS could serve all the kids currently in charters - if all of DCI changed to Coolidge overnight, for example.
DCI is approximately the same square footage as Anacostia High School, except DCI has 1,700 students and Anacostia has 250, and Anacostia High School is much, much nicer.
https://washingtonian.com/2014/02/03/anacostia-high-school-renovation-snags-design-award/
Right, this is a good illustration. The Coolidge comparison was simply meant to illustrate the same point in a nearby location.
Charter schools should not be defunded and indeed should be helped to better facilities when they outperform and outenroll.
The city spent $130 million building a pool at Roosevelt High School, a school with one of the lowest take-up rates among in-boundary children in the city. The entire annual budget of DCI is about $45 million.
That pool can also be used by all city residents including charter school students. What's your point?
This. What a weird thing to complain about. It's fine if some schools have pools and pools cost money, but they're for everyone. I go to the Dunbar pool all the time myself.
Seems like a pretty glaring example of the funding disparities between charters and DCPS. Some of these charter schools don't even have gyms.
It's more like DCPS is more connected with other DCPS and other city services than charters are, in a way that makes it difficult to do an apples to apples comparison of this stuff.
Please. Open your eyes and use your brain. Half the kids in this city go to DCPS. Half go to charters. If they go to DCPS, the facilities are lavish -- so lavish many schools win design awards. They go to schools that have Olympic sized pools, even if the school doesn't have enough kids interested in swimming to field a swim team. And the teachers are among the highest paid in the country. If the kids go to charters, the facilities are outdated, cramped and sometimes outright decrepit. And the teachers work for a fraction of what DCPS pays. And it's all because the city actively discriminates against children based on which school they happen to attend. It's indefensible.
Tour Yu Ying and get back to us.
Roosevelt's pool cost four times as much as that entire buidling.
K, but it isn't for Roosevelt's exclusive use.
Yes, it's open from 6:15am to 6:45am every other Tuesday, so clearly it's for the entire city.
Must you spread misinformation? DPR website says this:
Monday - Friday: 6 am - 9 am & 5 pm - 9 pm
Saturday & Sunday: Closed
I don't know the daytime schedule but others have said that other school programs use it. Also when there are swim meets, kids from other schools are using it, right?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:An unpopular opinion for DCUM- if the charters were properly funded the better ones would blow DCPS out of the water. So many struggle under the costs of facilities and teacher turn over from low salaries. If Charters had money to solve those problems the middling to good ones could be amazing.
+1 on this.
Also, Coolidge has a lot larger and better facilities than DCI which holds around the same number of high schoolers. Sports facilities in particular. DCI could have used the space next to it for a much-needed sports field, but townhouses are going up instead. Now the school is battling neighbors to try to use a nearby park for athletics. The charter schools can't just easily move and buy new buildings left and right, and they aren't provided with enough funds to truly utilize public and DC-owned space like Walter Reed. Meanwhile, there is no way that DCPS could serve all the kids currently in charters - if all of DCI changed to Coolidge overnight, for example.
DCI is approximately the same square footage as Anacostia High School, except DCI has 1,700 students and Anacostia has 250, and Anacostia High School is much, much nicer.
https://washingtonian.com/2014/02/03/anacostia-high-school-renovation-snags-design-award/
This is kinda bonkers. Anacostia High School is 247,000 square feet. That's much, much, MUCH bigger than a Walmart. How do 250 kids occupy 247,000 square feet?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:An unpopular opinion for DCUM- if the charters were properly funded the better ones would blow DCPS out of the water. So many struggle under the costs of facilities and teacher turn over from low salaries. If Charters had money to solve those problems the middling to good ones could be amazing.
+1 on this.
Also, Coolidge has a lot larger and better facilities than DCI which holds around the same number of high schoolers. Sports facilities in particular. DCI could have used the space next to it for a much-needed sports field, but townhouses are going up instead. Now the school is battling neighbors to try to use a nearby park for athletics. The charter schools can't just easily move and buy new buildings left and right, and they aren't provided with enough funds to truly utilize public and DC-owned space like Walter Reed. Meanwhile, there is no way that DCPS could serve all the kids currently in charters - if all of DCI changed to Coolidge overnight, for example.
DCI is approximately the same square footage as Anacostia High School, except DCI has 1,700 students and Anacostia has 250, and Anacostia High School is much, much nicer.
https://washingtonian.com/2014/02/03/anacostia-high-school-renovation-snags-design-award/
Right, this is a good illustration. The Coolidge comparison was simply meant to illustrate the same point in a nearby location.
Charter schools should not be defunded and indeed should be helped to better facilities when they outperform and outenroll.
The city spent $130 million building a pool at Roosevelt High School, a school with one of the lowest take-up rates among in-boundary children in the city. The entire annual budget of DCI is about $45 million.
That pool can also be used by all city residents including charter school students. What's your point?
This. What a weird thing to complain about. It's fine if some schools have pools and pools cost money, but they're for everyone. I go to the Dunbar pool all the time myself.
Seems like a pretty glaring example of the funding disparities between charters and DCPS. Some of these charter schools don't even have gyms.
It's more like DCPS is more connected with other DCPS and other city services than charters are, in a way that makes it difficult to do an apples to apples comparison of this stuff.
Please. Open your eyes and use your brain. Half the kids in this city go to DCPS. Half go to charters. If they go to DCPS, the facilities are lavish -- so lavish many schools win design awards. They go to schools that have Olympic sized pools, even if the school doesn't have enough kids interested in swimming to field a swim team. And the teachers are among the highest paid in the country. If the kids go to charters, the facilities are outdated, cramped and sometimes outright decrepit. And the teachers work for a fraction of what DCPS pays. And it's all because the city actively discriminates against children based on which school they happen to attend. It's indefensible.
Tour Yu Ying and get back to us.
Roosevelt's pool cost four times as much as that entire buidling.
K, but it isn't for Roosevelt's exclusive use.
Yes, it's open from 6:15am to 6:45am every other Tuesday, so clearly it's for the entire city.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:An unpopular opinion for DCUM- if the charters were properly funded the better ones would blow DCPS out of the water. So many struggle under the costs of facilities and teacher turn over from low salaries. If Charters had money to solve those problems the middling to good ones could be amazing.
+1 on this.
Also, Coolidge has a lot larger and better facilities than DCI which holds around the same number of high schoolers. Sports facilities in particular. DCI could have used the space next to it for a much-needed sports field, but townhouses are going up instead. Now the school is battling neighbors to try to use a nearby park for athletics. The charter schools can't just easily move and buy new buildings left and right, and they aren't provided with enough funds to truly utilize public and DC-owned space like Walter Reed. Meanwhile, there is no way that DCPS could serve all the kids currently in charters - if all of DCI changed to Coolidge overnight, for example.
DCI is approximately the same square footage as Anacostia High School, except DCI has 1,700 students and Anacostia has 250, and Anacostia High School is much, much nicer.
https://washingtonian.com/2014/02/03/anacostia-high-school-renovation-snags-design-award/
Right, this is a good illustration. The Coolidge comparison was simply meant to illustrate the same point in a nearby location.
Charter schools should not be defunded and indeed should be helped to better facilities when they outperform and outenroll.
The city spent $130 million building a pool at Roosevelt High School, a school with one of the lowest take-up rates among in-boundary children in the city. The entire annual budget of DCI is about $45 million.
That pool can also be used by all city residents including charter school students. What's your point?
This. What a weird thing to complain about. It's fine if some schools have pools and pools cost money, but they're for everyone. I go to the Dunbar pool all the time myself.
Seems like a pretty glaring example of the funding disparities between charters and DCPS. Some of these charter schools don't even have gyms.
It's more like DCPS is more connected with other DCPS and other city services than charters are, in a way that makes it difficult to do an apples to apples comparison of this stuff.
Please. Open your eyes and use your brain. Half the kids in this city go to DCPS. Half go to charters. If they go to DCPS, the facilities are lavish -- so lavish many schools win design awards. They go to schools that have Olympic sized pools, even if the school doesn't have enough kids interested in swimming to field a swim team. And the teachers are among the highest paid in the country. If the kids go to charters, the facilities are outdated, cramped and sometimes outright decrepit. And the teachers work for a fraction of what DCPS pays. And it's all because the city actively discriminates against children based on which school they happen to attend. It's indefensible.
Tour Yu Ying and get back to us.
Roosevelt's pool cost four times as much as that entire buidling.
K, but it isn't for Roosevelt's exclusive use.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:An unpopular opinion for DCUM- if the charters were properly funded the better ones would blow DCPS out of the water. So many struggle under the costs of facilities and teacher turn over from low salaries. If Charters had money to solve those problems the middling to good ones could be amazing.
+1 on this.
Also, Coolidge has a lot larger and better facilities than DCI which holds around the same number of high schoolers. Sports facilities in particular. DCI could have used the space next to it for a much-needed sports field, but townhouses are going up instead. Now the school is battling neighbors to try to use a nearby park for athletics. The charter schools can't just easily move and buy new buildings left and right, and they aren't provided with enough funds to truly utilize public and DC-owned space like Walter Reed. Meanwhile, there is no way that DCPS could serve all the kids currently in charters - if all of DCI changed to Coolidge overnight, for example.
DCI is approximately the same square footage as Anacostia High School, except DCI has 1,700 students and Anacostia has 250, and Anacostia High School is much, much nicer.
https://washingtonian.com/2014/02/03/anacostia-high-school-renovation-snags-design-award/
Right, this is a good illustration. The Coolidge comparison was simply meant to illustrate the same point in a nearby location.
Charter schools should not be defunded and indeed should be helped to better facilities when they outperform and outenroll.
The city spent $130 million building a pool at Roosevelt High School, a school with one of the lowest take-up rates among in-boundary children in the city. The entire annual budget of DCI is about $45 million.
That pool can also be used by all city residents including charter school students. What's your point?
This. What a weird thing to complain about. It's fine if some schools have pools and pools cost money, but they're for everyone. I go to the Dunbar pool all the time myself.
Seems like a pretty glaring example of the funding disparities between charters and DCPS. Some of these charter schools don't even have gyms.
It's more like DCPS is more connected with other DCPS and other city services than charters are, in a way that makes it difficult to do an apples to apples comparison of this stuff.
Please. Open your eyes and use your brain. Half the kids in this city go to DCPS. Half go to charters. If they go to DCPS, the facilities are lavish -- so lavish many schools win design awards. They go to schools that have Olympic sized pools, even if the school doesn't have enough kids interested in swimming to field a swim team. And the teachers are among the highest paid in the country. If the kids go to charters, the facilities are outdated, cramped and sometimes outright decrepit. And the teachers work for a fraction of what DCPS pays. And it's all because the city actively discriminates against children based on which school they happen to attend. It's indefensible.
Tour Yu Ying and get back to us.
Roosevelt's pool cost four times as much as that entire buidling.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:An unpopular opinion for DCUM- if the charters were properly funded the better ones would blow DCPS out of the water. So many struggle under the costs of facilities and teacher turn over from low salaries. If Charters had money to solve those problems the middling to good ones could be amazing.
+1 on this.
Also, Coolidge has a lot larger and better facilities than DCI which holds around the same number of high schoolers. Sports facilities in particular. DCI could have used the space next to it for a much-needed sports field, but townhouses are going up instead. Now the school is battling neighbors to try to use a nearby park for athletics. The charter schools can't just easily move and buy new buildings left and right, and they aren't provided with enough funds to truly utilize public and DC-owned space like Walter Reed. Meanwhile, there is no way that DCPS could serve all the kids currently in charters - if all of DCI changed to Coolidge overnight, for example.
DCI is approximately the same square footage as Anacostia High School, except DCI has 1,700 students and Anacostia has 250, and Anacostia High School is much, much nicer.
https://washingtonian.com/2014/02/03/anacostia-high-school-renovation-snags-design-award/
Right, this is a good illustration. The Coolidge comparison was simply meant to illustrate the same point in a nearby location.
Charter schools should not be defunded and indeed should be helped to better facilities when they outperform and outenroll.
The city spent $130 million building a pool at Roosevelt High School, a school with one of the lowest take-up rates among in-boundary children in the city. The entire annual budget of DCI is about $45 million.
That pool can also be used by all city residents including charter school students. What's your point?
This. What a weird thing to complain about. It's fine if some schools have pools and pools cost money, but they're for everyone. I go to the Dunbar pool all the time myself.
Seems like a pretty glaring example of the funding disparities between charters and DCPS. Some of these charter schools don't even have gyms.
It's more like DCPS is more connected with other DCPS and other city services than charters are, in a way that makes it difficult to do an apples to apples comparison of this stuff.
Please. Open your eyes and use your brain. Half the kids in this city go to DCPS. Half go to charters. If they go to DCPS, the facilities are lavish -- so lavish many schools win design awards. They go to schools that have Olympic sized pools, even if the school doesn't have enough kids interested in swimming to field a swim team. And the teachers are among the highest paid in the country. If the kids go to charters, the facilities are outdated, cramped and sometimes outright decrepit. And the teachers work for a fraction of what DCPS pays. And it's all because the city actively discriminates against children based on which school they happen to attend. It's indefensible.
Tour Yu Ying and get back to us.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:An unpopular opinion for DCUM- if the charters were properly funded the better ones would blow DCPS out of the water. So many struggle under the costs of facilities and teacher turn over from low salaries. If Charters had money to solve those problems the middling to good ones could be amazing.
+1 on this.
Also, Coolidge has a lot larger and better facilities than DCI which holds around the same number of high schoolers. Sports facilities in particular. DCI could have used the space next to it for a much-needed sports field, but townhouses are going up instead. Now the school is battling neighbors to try to use a nearby park for athletics. The charter schools can't just easily move and buy new buildings left and right, and they aren't provided with enough funds to truly utilize public and DC-owned space like Walter Reed. Meanwhile, there is no way that DCPS could serve all the kids currently in charters - if all of DCI changed to Coolidge overnight, for example.
DCI is approximately the same square footage as Anacostia High School, except DCI has 1,700 students and Anacostia has 250, and Anacostia High School is much, much nicer.
https://washingtonian.com/2014/02/03/anacostia-high-school-renovation-snags-design-award/
+1
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:An unpopular opinion for DCUM- if the charters were properly funded the better ones would blow DCPS out of the water. So many struggle under the costs of facilities and teacher turn over from low salaries. If Charters had money to solve those problems the middling to good ones could be amazing.
+1 on this.
Also, Coolidge has a lot larger and better facilities than DCI which holds around the same number of high schoolers. Sports facilities in particular. DCI could have used the space next to it for a much-needed sports field, but townhouses are going up instead. Now the school is battling neighbors to try to use a nearby park for athletics. The charter schools can't just easily move and buy new buildings left and right, and they aren't provided with enough funds to truly utilize public and DC-owned space like Walter Reed. Meanwhile, there is no way that DCPS could serve all the kids currently in charters - if all of DCI changed to Coolidge overnight, for example.
DCI is approximately the same square footage as Anacostia High School, except DCI has 1,700 students and Anacostia has 250, and Anacostia High School is much, much nicer.
https://washingtonian.com/2014/02/03/anacostia-high-school-renovation-snags-design-award/
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:An unpopular opinion for DCUM- if the charters were properly funded the better ones would blow DCPS out of the water. So many struggle under the costs of facilities and teacher turn over from low salaries. If Charters had money to solve those problems the middling to good ones could be amazing.
+1 on this.
Also, Coolidge has a lot larger and better facilities than DCI which holds around the same number of high schoolers. Sports facilities in particular. DCI could have used the space next to it for a much-needed sports field, but townhouses are going up instead. Now the school is battling neighbors to try to use a nearby park for athletics. The charter schools can't just easily move and buy new buildings left and right, and they aren't provided with enough funds to truly utilize public and DC-owned space like Walter Reed. Meanwhile, there is no way that DCPS could serve all the kids currently in charters - if all of DCI changed to Coolidge overnight, for example.
DCI is approximately the same square footage as Anacostia High School, except DCI has 1,700 students and Anacostia has 250, and Anacostia High School is much, much nicer.
https://washingtonian.com/2014/02/03/anacostia-high-school-renovation-snags-design-award/
Right, this is a good illustration. The Coolidge comparison was simply meant to illustrate the same point in a nearby location.
Charter schools should not be defunded and indeed should be helped to better facilities when they outperform and outenroll.
The city spent $130 million building a pool at Roosevelt High School, a school with one of the lowest take-up rates among in-boundary children in the city. The entire annual budget of DCI is about $45 million.
That pool can also be used by all city residents including charter school students. What's your point?
This. What a weird thing to complain about. It's fine if some schools have pools and pools cost money, but they're for everyone. I go to the Dunbar pool all the time myself.
Seems like a pretty glaring example of the funding disparities between charters and DCPS. Some of these charter schools don't even have gyms.
It's more like DCPS is more connected with other DCPS and other city services than charters are, in a way that makes it difficult to do an apples to apples comparison of this stuff.
Please. Open your eyes and use your brain. Half the kids in this city go to DCPS. Half go to charters. If they go to DCPS, the facilities are lavish -- so lavish many schools win design awards. They go to schools that have Olympic sized pools, even if the school doesn't have enough kids interested in swimming to field a swim team. And the teachers are among the highest paid in the country. If the kids go to charters, the facilities are outdated, cramped and sometimes outright decrepit. And the teachers work for a fraction of what DCPS pays. And it's all because the city actively discriminates against children based on which school they happen to attend. It's indefensible.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:An unpopular opinion for DCUM- if the charters were properly funded the better ones would blow DCPS out of the water. So many struggle under the costs of facilities and teacher turn over from low salaries. If Charters had money to solve those problems the middling to good ones could be amazing.
+1 on this.
Also, Coolidge has a lot larger and better facilities than DCI which holds around the same number of high schoolers. Sports facilities in particular. DCI could have used the space next to it for a much-needed sports field, but townhouses are going up instead. Now the school is battling neighbors to try to use a nearby park for athletics. The charter schools can't just easily move and buy new buildings left and right, and they aren't provided with enough funds to truly utilize public and DC-owned space like Walter Reed. Meanwhile, there is no way that DCPS could serve all the kids currently in charters - if all of DCI changed to Coolidge overnight, for example.
DCI is approximately the same square footage as Anacostia High School, except DCI has 1,700 students and Anacostia has 250, and Anacostia High School is much, much nicer.
https://washingtonian.com/2014/02/03/anacostia-high-school-renovation-snags-design-award/
Right, this is a good illustration. The Coolidge comparison was simply meant to illustrate the same point in a nearby location.
Charter schools should not be defunded and indeed should be helped to better facilities when they outperform and outenroll.
The city spent $130 million building a pool at Roosevelt High School, a school with one of the lowest take-up rates among in-boundary children in the city. The entire annual budget of DCI is about $45 million.
That pool can also be used by all city residents including charter school students. What's your point?
This. What a weird thing to complain about. It's fine if some schools have pools and pools cost money, but they're for everyone. I go to the Dunbar pool all the time myself.
Seems like a pretty glaring example of the funding disparities between charters and DCPS. Some of these charter schools don't even have gyms.
It's more like DCPS is more connected with other DCPS and other city services than charters are, in a way that makes it difficult to do an apples to apples comparison of this stuff.