Anonymous wrote:And will people choose it when it no longer feeds into Wilson?
Anonymous wrote:Hardy is even worse than I thought if advanced math kids need to go to Ellington for instruction.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I really think Eaton families have 1) a right to voice their frustration or disappointment 2) a responsibility to see that if they mobilize to make Hardy better they will likely be glad they didn't send their kids to Deal.
At this point it seem easier to make Hardy better than to fight these plans.
I'm going to fight them. It's my kid who will live through a transitional school that is not as solid as what she could have had, By the time Hardy is better, I'll be a grandparent.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There will be plenty of room at Wilson because this plan will inspire most people to consider private. Why on earth would a family who could afford private take the chance of sending a kid to Hardy? Eaton kids have had the Hardy option for years, but I've never seen a single kid take that option.
1) many families cannot afford private
2) many IB feeder families for Mann, etc are voluntarily sending their children to Hardy as it is.
IF this were true (hint - it's not) then why is Hardy majority OOB, with Mann being the least represented among its IB schools?!
Mann sent 0 kids to hardy last year or the year before.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Question: If both Deal and Hardy fed into Wilson, would that exceed Wilson's capacity?
Deal- capacity 1200, three grades=400 per grade
Hardy - capacity 500, three grades=166 per grade
Wilson- capacity 1600, four grades=400 per grade
So the per-grade capacity of Deal and Hardy combined is about 40% greater than Wilson. Granted, 100% of Deal and Hardy graduates don't go to Wilson. But Deal has only been super-popular for a few years, the kids who are in Wilson now are kids who were in Deal when it was significantly smaller. And Wilson is about 10% over capacity right now. The middle school drama of the past few years is about to get repeated for high school.
Wilson should be expanded. Most DC-area public high schools, in popular neighborhoods, are close to 2,000 students and growing. Deal is already large for a jr high or middle school so expanding Deal may not be a good idea... If Hardy made the uniforms optional would more IB students attend?
Its not the uniforms, its the academics.
There are limited language options, advanced math students have to travel to Ellington, etc. There is a wide gap between what advanced students get at Deal vs Hardy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Question: If both Deal and Hardy fed into Wilson, would that exceed Wilson's capacity?
Deal- capacity 1200, three grades=400 per grade
Hardy - capacity 500, three grades=166 per grade
Wilson- capacity 1600, four grades=400 per grade
So the per-grade capacity of Deal and Hardy combined is about 40% greater than Wilson. Granted, 100% of Deal and Hardy graduates don't go to Wilson. But Deal has only been super-popular for a few years, the kids who are in Wilson now are kids who were in Deal when it was significantly smaller. And Wilson is about 10% over capacity right now. The middle school drama of the past few years is about to get repeated for high school.
Wilson should be expanded. Most DC-area public high schools, in popular neighborhoods, are close to 2,000 students and growing. Deal is already large for a jr high or middle school so expanding Deal may not be a good idea... If Hardy made the uniforms optional would more IB students attend?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Question: If both Deal and Hardy fed into Wilson, would that exceed Wilson's capacity?
Deal- capacity 1200, three grades=400 per grade
Hardy - capacity 500, three grades=166 per grade
Wilson- capacity 1600, four grades=400 per grade
So the per-grade capacity of Deal and Hardy combined is about 40% greater than Wilson. Granted, 100% of Deal and Hardy graduates don't go to Wilson. But Deal has only been super-popular for a few years, the kids who are in Wilson now are kids who were in Deal when it was significantly smaller. And Wilson is about 10% over capacity right now. The middle school drama of the past few years is about to get repeated for high school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There will be plenty of room at Wilson because this plan will inspire most people to consider private. Why on earth would a family who could afford private take the chance of sending a kid to Hardy? Eaton kids have had the Hardy option for years, but I've never seen a single kid take that option.
1) many families cannot afford private
2) many IB feeder families for Mann, etc are voluntarily sending their children to Hardy as it is.
IF this were true (hint - it's not) then why is Hardy majority OOB, with Mann being the least represented among its IB schools?!
jsteele wrote:Anonymous wrote:jsteele wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If Eaton is to be thrown under, the parents should advocate for the full lottery plan. That way they'd have at least a chance at a sect school . Hardy is awful.
Great logic. Let's screw the whole damn system if we are unhappy with a completely predictable outcome?
Just go to Hardy, it will get better. Don't vindictively advocate for the nuclear option C.
People just want the best for their kids. A chance at a decent high school education is better than none. There is little chance at Hardy.
Now you see why there is support for choice sets outside of Ward 3. The only difference is the others would give up a kidney for the opportunity to attend Hardy, which you won't consider.
Then let them have the opportunity, as it will likely be better than their other options. However, for schools that are being moved to Hardy unwillingly, you are forcing them to accept an inferior opportunity compared to what they had before.
You may not know the history of Hardy, which btw, is far from a failing school, but once "they" did get the opportunity. Michelle Rhee, at the behest of inbounds families, changed all that. Now the school is increasingly popular with inbounds families. The drop off from Deal to Hardy is not all that big and probably won't exist at all soon. Come over to my neighborhood where we are being switched from Deal to West. Then talk to me about being forced to accept an inferior opportunity.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:\Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The proposals provide that John Eaton ES will be forced out of Deal, and be assigned to Hardy, What do Eaton parents think of that??
Eaton and Oyster were always the most vulnerable. They're both closer to Hardy than Deal anyway. Even if there weren't a re-alignment of the boundaries in the political works, it always made sense to anyone who can read a map.
Can't remember if I posted in this thread or another, but reading a map doesn't mean much unless it had an overlay of bus and metro lines. However close Eaton and Oyster may be to Hardy, the commute will be twice or three times as long than the one the kids would make via the red line.
Have no horse in this race, just know that there is basically no easy east-west bus route (bit better for Eaton, but pretty bad for Oyster) for those two neighborhoods.
Eaton itself may be a little closer to Hardy but those who are inbound for Eaton live mostly closer to Deal. Eaton itself is the southern edge of its district .
Working with the very unlikely assumption that all Eaton students begin their trip from Eaton itself (as opposed to an OOB location)
Assuming walking:
shortest Eaton to Hardy = 1.6 miles
shortest Eaton to Deal = 1.8 miles
Assuming driving (Google maps):
shortest Eaton to Hardy = 5 min. driving, 16 min. public transit
shortest Eaton to Deal = 5 min. driving, 17 min. public transit
Assuming Public Transportation (WMATA trip planner):
shortest Eaton to Hardy = $1.60
shortest Eaton to Deal = $1.60
The Cleveland Park Metro stop might be a better starting point, ,because that is the major transit point in the Eaton district. From there, Deal and Wilson are two stops north on the Red line. How to get to Hardy? You could take a bus up Porter to Wisconsin Ave, Then wait and transfer to another bus. Then take the notoriously slow (and bunched) 30s line down Wisconsin Avenue at rush hour. By car, in the morning you are going to Deal northbound against traffic. Driving to Hardy requires going with rush hour traffic, when there's no way of avoiding constrained Wisconsin through Glover Park.
I doubt the "I prefer the red line to the bus" argument will gain traction, or anything other than eye-rolling. Eaton is closer to Hardy. Period. If you can map out the majority of student commutes to get to Eaton in the first place, go for it but considering how many are OOB, that is unlikely to be persuasive.