Anonymous wrote:My kid is at Watkins and there are still plenty of families from his Peabody days in the fourth grade with him. I volunteer regularly in the classroom, and I’d say it’s like many other schools with a large student body— some kids are doing exceptionally well, others struggle to learn. The good thing is that there still is a large enough group of kids that can push each other academically even in the fourth grade, so it’s not as dire as some of these others posters want to make it seem.
Anonymous wrote:Watkins should close and be reopened as a neighborhood middle school. Only 30% of the students are in-boundary -- they can be redistributed to Payne, Brent, and Tyler. Watkins Middle School should serve Miner, Maury, Payne and Brent; Stuart should serve Ludlow, JO, and Tyler non-Spanish. Or something like that.
Anonymous wrote:And there are a whole lot of them at BASIS, so the improvements at SH aren’t enough for them to deal with Watkins for 5th grade. Same as it ever was. . .
Anonymous wrote:How are things going?
Anonymous wrote:Can we get back to the topic at hand-- is this principal actually horrific or is this a case of affluenza?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Or give 'em vouchers. Good charter or voucher, and maybe they'll stay in the city versus moving to the 'burbs.
funny. I wouldn't be caught dead enrolling my child at a DC private that touches vouchers with a 10 foot pole. Your outcomes would be on par with random neighborhood school
Have you seen the list of schools that accept the vouchers? http://servingourchildrendc.org/our-program/find-a-school/
Lowell School
St. John's College High School
Georgetown Day School
Sidwell Friends School
Edmund Burke School
Beavoir-National Cathedral School
Natl Presbyterian School
Aidan Montessori
Visitation
Holy Trinity
St. Albans
Gonzaga
St Anselm's
http://servingourchildrendc.org/our-program/find-a-school/
Interesting. I wonder if they each take a token voucher or two, or a significant percentage of students via vouchers? In other words, is this a real option for parents, or not really if a tiny tiny fraction of applicants benefit?
That isn't disclosed -- and certainly any student who qualifies for the voucher is going to need an addl financial aid award from most of these schools to be able to afford it. And, they have to have the smarts to get in.
that was my original point. good luck using that voucher at Sidwell. Schools with tuition from 35-40K are nonstarters for any student who is not capable of getting in on merit and likely also able to get more serious financial aid. The school ecosystem which feeds on vouchers is lower performing parochial schools with lower costs in general. As I said, not an improvement over many public options.