Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How many weeks are left in school year?
how many were left in August? November? Feb? April? Early May when we switched to 3 ft? Is your game plan really to just run out the clock while kids languish? Shame on you.
Retroactive ire is not useful.
Of course it is. Getting kids back even for a week would be beneficial. You’ve thrown away the entire school year now and don’t care. Now the pressure needs stay on for a normal year in 2021-2022.
My dc showed a dramatic change for the better after 2 days in IPL. Even one month would be of enormous benefit to children who have been at home for over a year.
Hey, I don’t disagree. But it’s also not going to happen.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DC Public Schools failed these neighborhoods for many years. Charters stepped in to fill gaps where DC was unwilling to do the hard work. The only reason why Petworth, Logan etc is a thing is because families had the option of sending their children to a charter.
Would you send your kid to Thomson elementary school if there was 5th grader who shared coke with classmates? That is what happened 10 years ago.
There is a long history of what Charters did to make DC what it is now.
Exactly. You can thank charter schools for part of the hot DC real estate market in recent decades.
Yes. And many young families stay and end up using their neighborhood schools because they saw other families, with slightly older kids, using a charter school. Meanwhile, public revenue is up, schools get funded at a higher level, there is a larger constituency advocating for better public schooling, and families that have historically been stuck in god-awful DCPS schools have an option for something better, for free. And nearly half of the city’s school children have taken advantage of those options. That tells you something.
Argue for excellent oversight, for limits on new charters, for better leadership at DCPS but stfu with the scapegoating of charters in DC. They are part of the solution. DCPS was, and largely is, the problem that needs attention.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DC Public Schools failed these neighborhoods for many years. Charters stepped in to fill gaps where DC was unwilling to do the hard work. The only reason why Petworth, Logan etc is a thing is because families had the option of sending their children to a charter.
Would you send your kid to Thomson elementary school if there was 5th grader who shared coke with classmates? That is what happened 10 years ago.
There is a long history of what Charters did to make DC what it is now.
Exactly. You can thank charter schools for part of the hot DC real estate market in recent decades.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DC Public Schools failed these neighborhoods for many years. Charters stepped in to fill gaps where DC was unwilling to do the hard work. The only reason why Petworth, Logan etc is a thing is because families had the option of sending their children to a charter.
Would you send your kid to Thomson elementary school if there was 5th grader who shared coke with classmates? That is what happened 10 years ago.
There is a long history of what Charters did to make DC what it is now.
Exactly. You can thank charter schools for part of the hot DC real estate market in recent decades.
Anonymous wrote:DC Public Schools failed these neighborhoods for many years. Charters stepped in to fill gaps where DC was unwilling to do the hard work. The only reason why Petworth, Logan etc is a thing is because families had the option of sending their children to a charter.
Would you send your kid to Thomson elementary school if there was 5th grader who shared coke with classmates? That is what happened 10 years ago.
There is a long history of what Charters did to make DC what it is now.
Anonymous wrote:I would love it if charters close. The privatization of public schools is evil.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would love it if charters close. The privatization of public schools is evil.
I would love it if we had private school vouchers available to everyone. People shouldn't be forced to choose between the never-ending dumpster fire that is DCPS and charters, especially when both of them refuse to do their jobs and educate children.
Anonymous wrote:I would love it if charters close. The privatization of public schools is evil.