Anonymous wrote:Lol that OP thinks her kid's school is high performing because of all her super-awesome PTA participation.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For OP and others who don't want OOB kids at their schools: you are not living in the right place. Move to VA or MD.
That doesn't make sense either. Those schools VA or MD typically have more SES and racial diversity than the JKLMMs. There are plenty of town homes and apartments mixed in with most of the good school zones, unless you target an area like Mclean or Whitman pyramid. My point is, don't lump all people who do not live in DC (though I do) with people like this OP. That is not fair to the people in VA and MD.
Well, there are tradeoffs in life. You can't have everything. If your priority is having neighborhood schools without out of bounds children, the District is not the place for you. The boundary process made clear that OOB numbers will be increasing, not decreasing, and kids will have the right to continue with the feeder pattern. If getting out of that system is critical to you, then you should leave the District. You can complain on an anonymous forum as much as you like, but it won't change the reality.
This is BS. OOB numbers will steadily decrease as they have been doing for years, due to increased IB interest at many DCPS. The set asides will not reverse this trend. They will only slow/modify it.
Great! All taken care of. Stop complaining about it then.
There are multiple people responding on this thread.
Anonymous wrote:You are an idiot OP. My IB school doesn't even have a PTA or any formal parent organization. there is zero fundraising capabilities. The school is almost all ELL and the parents who are trying to "improve" the school are a handful of mainly white high SES parents and that doesn't go over so well with some of the admin and lower income families. And a group of 20 parents can only do much when 300 of the students are below grade level. So if I am trying to get my kid elsewhere because I work full time and I don't have the luxury of spending 60 hours a week improving my school thats my business.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For OP and others who don't want OOB kids at their schools: you are not living in the right place. Move to VA or MD.
That doesn't make sense either. Those schools VA or MD typically have more SES and racial diversity than the JKLMMs. There are plenty of town homes and apartments mixed in with most of the good school zones, unless you target an area like Mclean or Whitman pyramid. My point is, don't lump all people who do not live in DC (though I do) with people like this OP. That is not fair to the people in VA and MD.
Well, there are tradeoffs in life. You can't have everything. If your priority is having neighborhood schools without out of bounds children, the District is not the place for you. The boundary process made clear that OOB numbers will be increasing, not decreasing, and kids will have the right to continue with the feeder pattern. If getting out of that system is critical to you, then you should leave the District. You can complain on an anonymous forum as much as you like, but it won't change the reality.
This is BS. OOB numbers will steadily decrease as they have been doing for years, due to increased IB interest at many DCPS. The set asides will not reverse this trend. They will only slow/modify it.
Great! All taken care of. Stop complaining about it then.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For OP and others who don't want OOB kids at their schools: you are not living in the right place. Move to VA or MD.
That doesn't make sense either. Those schools VA or MD typically have more SES and racial diversity than the JKLMMs. There are plenty of town homes and apartments mixed in with most of the good school zones, unless you target an area like Mclean or Whitman pyramid. My point is, don't lump all people who do not live in DC (though I do) with people like this OP. That is not fair to the people in VA and MD.
Well, there are tradeoffs in life. You can't have everything. If your priority is having neighborhood schools without out of bounds children, the District is not the place for you. The boundary process made clear that OOB numbers will be increasing, not decreasing, and kids will have the right to continue with the feeder pattern. If getting out of that system is critical to you, then you should leave the District. You can complain on an anonymous forum as much as you like, but it won't change the reality.
This is BS. OOB numbers will steadily decrease as they have been doing for years, due to increased IB interest at many DCPS. The set asides will not reverse this trend. They will only slow/modify it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For OP and others who don't want OOB kids at their schools: you are not living in the right place. Move to VA or MD.
That doesn't make sense either. Those schools VA or MD typically have more SES and racial diversity than the JKLMMs. There are plenty of town homes and apartments mixed in with most of the good school zones, unless you target an area like Mclean or Whitman pyramid. My point is, don't lump all people who do not live in DC (though I do) with people like this OP. That is not fair to the people in VA and MD.
Well, there are tradeoffs in life. You can't have everything. If your priority is having neighborhood schools without out of bounds children, the District is not the place for you. The boundary process made clear that OOB numbers will be increasing, not decreasing, and kids will have the right to continue with the feeder pattern. If getting out of that system is critical to you, then you should leave the District. You can complain on an anonymous forum as much as you like, but it won't change the reality.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For OP and others who don't want OOB kids at their schools: you are not living in the right place. Move to VA or MD.
That doesn't make sense either. Those schools VA or MD typically have more SES and racial diversity than the JKLMMs. There are plenty of town homes and apartments mixed in with most of the good school zones, unless you target an area like Mclean or Whitman pyramid. My point is, don't lump all people who do not live in DC (though I do) with people like this OP. That is not fair to the people in VA and MD.
Well, there are tradeoffs in life. You can't have everything. If your priority is having neighborhood schools without out of bounds children, the District is not the place for you. The boundary process made clear that OOB numbers will be increasing, not decreasing, and kids will have the right to continue with the feeder pattern. If getting out of that system is critical to you, then you should leave the District. You can complain on an anonymous forum as much as you like, but it won't change the reality.
Fair enough, I was a NP, but just don't like it when people sling random mud at the supposedly evil suburbs.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For OP and others who don't want OOB kids at their schools: you are not living in the right place. Move to VA or MD.
That doesn't make sense either. Those schools VA or MD typically have more SES and racial diversity than the JKLMMs. There are plenty of town homes and apartments mixed in with most of the good school zones, unless you target an area like Mclean or Whitman pyramid. My point is, don't lump all people who do not live in DC (though I do) with people like this OP. That is not fair to the people in VA and MD.
Well, there are tradeoffs in life. You can't have everything. If your priority is having neighborhood schools without out of bounds children, the District is not the place for you. The boundary process made clear that OOB numbers will be increasing, not decreasing, and kids will have the right to continue with the feeder pattern. If getting out of that system is critical to you, then you should leave the District. You can complain on an anonymous forum as much as you like, but it won't change the reality.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For OP and others who don't want OOB kids at their schools: you are not living in the right place. Move to VA or MD.
That doesn't make sense either. Those schools VA or MD typically have more SES and racial diversity than the JKLMMs. There are plenty of town homes and apartments mixed in with most of the good school zones, unless you target an area like Mclean or Whitman pyramid. My point is, don't lump all people who do not live in DC (though I do) with people like this OP. That is not fair to the people in VA and MD.
Anonymous wrote:For OP and others who don't want OOB kids at their schools: you are not living in the right place. Move to VA or MD.
Former OOB mom here. I support your right as OOB to send your kid to a Ward 3 school but I want to remind you that renters pay property taxes indirectly as part of their rent.Anonymous wrote:Real life parent here. I'm OB! Proudly pay my real estate taxes for more than one parcel of real estate in DC, proudly pay for your kid (especially those of you living in apartments or renting houses in ward 2 and 3), and proudly took advantage of a better public school education in Ward 3 (also volunteered as a parent). No thank you necessary, all paid for.
No connection at all there. But keep trying.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ha! If kids hadn't gone OOB to the schools dd attended wotp, those schools would have shut down. Those schools needed kids like my dd and they still do today.Anonymous wrote:well said OP well said, some will do amazing things to make changes others will quit and go the path of least resistance. I am with you,. improve your own school or be able to afford to live in the area where you want your kid to go to school.
Ha! And, if the WOTP families fled in the 80s and 90s then the tax base would have collapsed and the city would have gone bankrupt. So, it's kind of a wash. Don't you think?
Anonymous wrote:Real life parent here. I'm OB! Proudly pay my real estate taxes for more than one parcel of real estate in DC, proudly pay for your kid (especially those of you living in apartments or renting houses in ward 2 and 3), and proudly took advantage of a better public school education in Ward 3 (also volunteered as a parent). No thank you necessary, all paid for.
Anonymous wrote:Real life parent here. I'm OB! Proudly pay my real estate taxes for more than one parcel of real estate in DC, proudly pay for your kid (especially those of you living in apartments or renting houses in ward 2 and 3), and proudly took advantage of a better public school education in Ward 3 (also volunteered as a parent). No thank you necessary, all paid for.