Anonymous wrote:Wow! Mann overtook Janney as the highest performing school. Very impressive, especially since Mann has more than twice the percentage of English language learners.
Well done.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do these score make anyone else want to just flee DC? It's like we're trying so hard to get into a handful of supposedly HRCSs when their scores are actually not that great.
Yep. Makes moving seem like a no-brainer.
Not for me. I see more and more families with kids moving into our neighborhood and their dedication to their schools - both DCPS & HRCS. I also see the unfortunate effects of displacement of those in poverty - many rent are being forced to move to PG County. I see this happening faster than the research is reporting it. Barry Farms and Anacostia development is just one example. Yes, we are talking 5+ years out - but my PS3 child will likely be fine in 3rd grade and beyond.
Good luck, but Middle class parents have been saying this line for 5+ years now...
Anonymous wrote:The new DC mayor should take note of the possibility that the DC tax base may decline due to the decision of higher SES families to flee to the suburbs where they would have a better school system. Eventually this school leadership will take the city down.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
When I looked over the Yu Ying Annual Report, they listed no teachers with over 5 years teaching experience, and many had only 1 or 2 years under their belts.
At least they publish these sad facts. They won't fess up to how many bilingual Chinese-speaking kids they enroll, although Chinese teachers tell me that the number is close to zero (I speak two dialects of Chinese). Even if the teachers had huge teaching experience, an immersion school can only do much with one-way immersion of course (where kids learn the target language only from teachers, not from peers).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The new DC mayor should take note of the possibility that the DC tax base may decline due to the decision of higher SES families to flee to the suburbs where they would have a better school system. Eventually this school leadership will take the city down.
In the aggregate, far fewer families are fleeing to the suburbs (or privates) than in the past. If you had told me when we bought our house 15 years ago that we would be sending our DC to Deal, I would have laughed. Things are getting better not worse. Perhaps they are not getting better fast enough but there are SO MANY more viable options than there used to be for families wishing to remain in the District.
Anonymous wrote:The new DC mayor should take note of the possibility that the DC tax base may decline due to the decision of higher SES families to flee to the suburbs where they would have a better school system. Eventually this school leadership will take the city down.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DCPS Elementary Schools scoring above 90:
JKLM....RS
E....JKLM....RS
Eaton joins the club this year for the first time.
Off these schools Ross has the highest % of FARMS and English language learners. Tiny school but a significant achievement.
Anonymous wrote:DCPS Elementary Schools scoring above 90:
JKLM....RS
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:http://www.washingtonpost.com/local/education/dc-students-proficiency-rates-inch-upward-on-annual-city-tests/2014/07/31/585af6ac-189c-11e4-9e3b-7f2f110c6265_story.html
I'm interested in the individual school scores. I'm particularly interested in how Brent Elementary School and Maury Elementary School compare to Janney/Key/Lafayette/Mann/Murch. I'm also interested in whether Tyler Elementary School and Amidon-Bowen Elementary School improved significantly.
Brent and Maury didn't exactly knock it out of the park this time around, although you'll see better results for white kids when scores are broken down by subgroup eventually (now that the 3rd and 4th graders are mostly white, and the 5th grade is highly diverse but no more than 18 kids). I thought that Brent would break into the 80s on this last CAS, but they didn't pull it off.
Tyler and Amidon did improve, but not by a lot.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:http://www.washingtonpost.com/local/education/dc-students-proficiency-rates-inch-upward-on-annual-city-tests/2014/07/31/585af6ac-189c-11e4-9e3b-7f2f110c6265_story.html
I'm interested in the individual school scores. I'm particularly interested in how Brent Elementary School and Maury Elementary School compare to Janney/Key/Lafayette/Mann/Murch. I'm also interested in whether Tyler Elementary School and Amidon-Bowen Elementary School improved significantly.