Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I want to know just how much space everyone thinks Peabody has. The Cluster boundary lines are not just drawn around Stanton Park. Do not forget that there are many IB families (some with sibling preference) on the waitlist for Peabody PS3. Now, if all of the ones who don't get in at PS or PK wait it out and enroll for their guaranteed K slot, I am curious just where all these 5 year olds are going to fit in the Peabody building.
Then again, if you are like many of the IB families who have no intention of sending your little dears to Watkins, I guess you won't bother switching from whatever school you used for PS and PK, so I guess I may have answered my own question. . .
My point is, having looked into both schools and experienced the Cluster through elementary, L-T only seems 3-4 years behind Watkins and Peabody as it now stands.
Good q about the space, although the answer remains shrouded in mystery. All I know is that the LT IB families far fared better in getting kids into Peabody this spring than they have since 2009. And LT IB families don't just head to Peabody, they head to Maury and charters. Your 3-4 years behind theory may hold up, but I don't see the momentum for change.
Anonymous wrote:I want to know just how much space everyone thinks Peabody has. The Cluster boundary lines are not just drawn around Stanton Park. Do not forget that there are many IB families (some with sibling preference) on the waitlist for Peabody PS3. Now, if all of the ones who don't get in at PS or PK wait it out and enroll for their guaranteed K slot, I am curious just where all these 5 year olds are going to fit in the Peabody building.
Then again, if you are like many of the IB families who have no intention of sending your little dears to Watkins, I guess you won't bother switching from whatever school you used for PS and PK, so I guess I may have answered my own question. . .
My point is, having looked into both schools and experienced the Cluster through elementary, L-T only seems 3-4 years behind Watkins and Peabody as it now stands.
Anonymous wrote: But the peer pressure won't necessarily be easy to resist, with a dozen gung ho PTA parents dying to see the next Maury emerge, giving neighborhood compatriots not-so-subtle guilt trips about involvement left and right.
Anonymous wrote:So, long term options and making a difference in the school aside, does anyone consider this a good option for ps and pk? I like the neighborhood aspect and the art and music curriculum a lot. We have also been accepted into Apple Tree, but am thinking to stay at LT. Would this be a mistake?
Anonymous wrote:So, long term options and making a difference in the school aside, does anyone consider this a good option for ps and pk? I like the neighborhood aspect and the art and music curriculum a lot. We have also been accepted into Apple Tree, but am thinking to stay at LT. Would this be a mistake?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is there really much difference in how the FARM kids are testing at the various Hill schools (excluding Amidon, unmitigated disaster)? What do the scores really tell us, other than than some schools have a lot more upper-middle-class kids and/or more poor kids in the upper elementary grades than others.
Correct me if I'm wrong, but 1/3 - 1/2 the white kids score advanced in 3rd grade everywhere they land, right, but only a tiny fraction of the blacks (0-6%). The white kids do a bit better at Watkins, and the black kids at Brent, where a good number come from military families/Bollilng Air Force base. There haven't been any white kids testing yet at Payne, Miner, or Ludlow-Taylor and this is the first year that any will have taken the test at Tyler SI and Maury. Is that right?
The DC school profiles used to break the scores down to show exact numbers of test takers by grade and race, but seemed to have stopped doing that several months ago. Wonder why.
We are at Brent and while I don't know any AA military kids from Bolling or otherwise (but there could be some I guess), both my children have a number of black/AA/mixed race kids in their classes who are from high SES families.
Anonymous wrote:Is there really much difference in how the FARM kids are testing at the various Hill schools (excluding Amidon, unmitigated disaster)? What do the scores really tell us, other than than some schools have a lot more upper-middle-class kids and/or more poor kids in the upper elementary grades than others.
Correct me if I'm wrong, but 1/3 - 1/2 the white kids score advanced in 3rd grade everywhere they land, right, but only a tiny fraction of the blacks (0-6%). The white kids do a bit better at Watkins, and the black kids at Brent, where a good number come from military families/Bollilng Air Force base. There haven't been any white kids testing yet at Payne, Miner, or Ludlow-Taylor and this is the first year that any will have taken the test at Tyler SI and Maury. Is that right?
The DC school profiles used to break the scores down to show exact numbers of test takers by grade and race, but seemed to have stopped doing that several months ago. Wonder why.
Anonymous wrote:DCPS has shown zero appetite for investigating extremely suspect testing gains and erasure rates. A push for a real investigation might be the fastest way to get LT a new principal.
http://www.usatoday.com/news/education/2011-03-27-school-test-table_N.htm