Anonymous
Post 12/16/2025 19:11     Subject: DC's School Report Cards are up. Any surprises?

Anonymous wrote:I'm just going to say this, during the government shutdown I was a sub at many Charters which most have not been mentioned in this thread due to their locations and they are terrible. I did sub at a few in the Ward 4 and 5 neighborhoods and they are not so great either. I question why some of the parents of the bright students let their kids remain.

If you want to put DCPS against Charters, stop pointing out a select few Charters that UMC parents cling to.


Go sub at DCPS in those same neighborhoods and get back to us.
Anonymous
Post 12/16/2025 18:47     Subject: DC's School Report Cards are up. Any surprises?

I'm just going to say this, during the government shutdown I was a sub at many Charters which most have not been mentioned in this thread due to their locations and they are terrible. I did sub at a few in the Ward 4 and 5 neighborhoods and they are not so great either. I question why some of the parents of the bright students let their kids remain.

If you want to put DCPS against Charters, stop pointing out a select few Charters that UMC parents cling to.
Anonymous
Post 12/12/2025 23:47     Subject: DC's School Report Cards are up. Any surprises?

Anonymous wrote:Different poster: Stuart Hobson had a pretty long waitlist last year. It made substantially fewer OOB offers than Hardy. It is a dcps neighborhood school that serves the eastern side of town. I think it id not worth it to commute to DCI from that side of town, unless or even if you learning a second language is very important to you, someone in your family lives of works in that direction, of you feel that you absolutely must lock in a high school option.


We live in NE. The commute is really easy if you live near the red line at the northern end of CH.

SH is just a few blocks from Union Station. Hop on red line there and it’s about 12 minute ride to Takoma and then another 10 minute ride on bus that drops right off at school. It’s so easy and your kid can do it on their own.

If you are by eastern market, take the shuttle that picks up down the street from there.




Anonymous
Post 12/12/2025 23:39     Subject: DC's School Report Cards are up. Any surprises?

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Again for those who missed it: Stuart-Hobson has nearly identical CAPE scores and other quantitative metrics to DCI.

DCI has slightly more kids meeting or exceeding expectations in math (60.9% to 57.2%). S-H has slightly more kids meeting or exceeding expectations in ELA (59.9% to 56.8%).

They have near identical chronic absentee rates (just under 20% for both). S-H has a better teacher retention rate (84% to 73%).

S-H is easier to get into OOB than DCI is to get into without coming from a feeder. However, it's not that hard to access a feeder for either school -- if you are willing to change schools in 3rd/4th/5th, both have feeders where you are very likely or guaranteed a spot via lottery.

The biggest advantage of DCI is the HS. For MS, there is no advantage unless the language component is very important to you. If your preferred HS is a private or application school anyway, there's no real difference.



There is a huge advantage to DCI over SH because DCI is able to meet the top students where they are and challenge them. Kids are not in classes with other kids who are 3 or 4 grade levels apart. They actually work to place kids by ability with most subjects, and the only middle school in this city that I know that uses standardized test scores as part of this placement in addition to grades and teachers recs.

So the lower performing kids are not in the same classes as the top performing kids. The top kids get more depth and challenge to meet them where they are. In addition, based on standardized test scores, the lower kids automatically get more classes in ELA, math etc.. instead of an elective so more support. It is not optional, they are placed in it.

This is how DCI is able to meet the needs of both the high and low performing students. In addition, they have high standards to be placed in the higher ability classes. For instance the highest track math class, the requirement is 90% or higher in math on standardized tests. So there are no kids in the class who should not be in it and the class can go deeper and be much more challenging. Not so with DCPS middle schools where OSSE doesn’t believe in tracking because of equity. BTW, DCI has multiple levels of math classes.

Also you should look at test scores more. I suspect lots of kids at SH are getting tutors to try to get the kids up to speed. It sounds like the tutor in this post has lots of these kids from DCPS middle schools in CH.

Lastly, the high school is even better because there are multiple official tracks for kids to actually pick where their interests lies. The school also realizes that not all kids are destined for college and has some vocational tracks that will give kids the skills they need to get jobs after high school.


This part is ironic, because SH uses standardized test scores to track students (as do EH and Jefferson per their open houses).


The only track that DCPS middle schools do is math and at these schools like the ones at CH the higher track is just grade level. It’s not like the track is as advanced and kids are ready to take AP Cal by 10th grade.

Plus DCI uses standardized test scores to place in many of the other subjects too. That is not happening in DCPS.


Multiple LT grad 6th graders were placed directly in SH 7th grade English classes this year and last based on test scores, so it’s 100% untrue that they only track math. It’s also not true that DCPS MSes don’t jump kids beyond grade level (and have them take above grade level CAPE test, unlike BASIS). SH puts a chunk of 6th graders directly in normal 7th grade math classes, then there’s two other tracks. EH had 8th graders 2 years advanced in math classes. Why do people insist on just making blanket statements about DCPS when they have literally no idea?
Anonymous
Post 12/12/2025 23:17     Subject: DC's School Report Cards are up. Any surprises?

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Again for those who missed it: Stuart-Hobson has nearly identical CAPE scores and other quantitative metrics to DCI.

DCI has slightly more kids meeting or exceeding expectations in math (60.9% to 57.2%). S-H has slightly more kids meeting or exceeding expectations in ELA (59.9% to 56.8%).

They have near identical chronic absentee rates (just under 20% for both). S-H has a better teacher retention rate (84% to 73%).

S-H is easier to get into OOB than DCI is to get into without coming from a feeder. However, it's not that hard to access a feeder for either school -- if you are willing to change schools in 3rd/4th/5th, both have feeders where you are very likely or guaranteed a spot via lottery.

The biggest advantage of DCI is the HS. For MS, there is no advantage unless the language component is very important to you. If your preferred HS is a private or application school anyway, there's no real difference.



There is a huge advantage to DCI over SH because DCI is able to meet the top students where they are and challenge them. Kids are not in classes with other kids who are 3 or 4 grade levels apart. They actually work to place kids by ability with most subjects, and the only middle school in this city that I know that uses standardized test scores as part of this placement in addition to grades and teachers recs.

So the lower performing kids are not in the same classes as the top performing kids. The top kids get more depth and challenge to meet them where they are. In addition, based on standardized test scores, the lower kids automatically get more classes in ELA, math etc.. instead of an elective so more support. It is not optional, they are placed in it.

This is how DCI is able to meet the needs of both the high and low performing students. In addition, they have high standards to be placed in the higher ability classes. For instance the highest track math class, the requirement is 90% or higher in math on standardized tests. So there are no kids in the class who should not be in it and the class can go deeper and be much more challenging. Not so with DCPS middle schools where OSSE doesn’t believe in tracking because of equity. BTW, DCI has multiple levels of math classes.

Also you should look at test scores more. I suspect lots of kids at SH are getting tutors to try to get the kids up to speed. It sounds like the tutor in this post has lots of these kids from DCPS middle schools in CH.

Lastly, the high school is even better because there are multiple official tracks for kids to actually pick where their interests lies. The school also realizes that not all kids are destined for college and has some vocational tracks that will give kids the skills they need to get jobs after high school.


This part is ironic, because SH uses standardized test scores to track students (as do EH and Jefferson per their open houses).


The only track that DCPS middle schools do is math and at these schools like the ones at CH the higher track is just grade level. It’s not like the track is as advanced and kids are ready to take AP Cal by 10th grade.

Plus DCI uses standardized test scores to place in many of the other subjects too. That is not happening in DCPS.
Anonymous
Post 12/12/2025 22:00     Subject: DC's School Report Cards are up. Any surprises?

SH and a lot of the other DCPS middle schools offer a lot of sports and extracurriculars. The really high-achieving kids are likely to be very busy with some combination of activities like the musical, debate, mock trial, and sports teams, etc. That does not always leave a ton of time for tutoring unless you absolutely need it.
Anonymous
Post 12/12/2025 19:06     Subject: DC's School Report Cards are up. Any surprises?

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Im the tutor from above. I will say I also tutor kids who are EXCELLENT and want further enrichment. So just because I tutor at your school doesn’t necessarily mean the kids are behind. But generally, sadly, dcps middle schools are not producing kids who are doing so well that they need enrichment, they’re producing kids who are so behind their parents notice and are rightly worried.


This is a confusing comment, especially when linked with your last one. And I say that as someone with serious reservations about our IB DCPS middle on the Hill.

First, what subject(s) do you tutor? If it's foreign language you need to state that up front because of course DCI is going to have kids kicking butt in foreign language and DCPS middle schools will have kids far behind that. Even kids at Deal and Hardy would be far behind DCI kids in foreign language. A lot of your comments have fixated on the foreign language opportunities at DCI, which I agree are pretty much the best in the city for public schools, but most parents are far less focused on foreign language than on core subjects like math and ELA.

Second, are you saying that the kids you tutor at DCI are all "EXCELLENT" and only getting tutoring for further enrichment, and the kids you tutor at Hill middle schools are all behind and their parents are hiring you because they are worried? That seems to be the implication but if so, just say that.

Third, how many kids do you tutor? Which Hill schools have you tutored kids at? All three? all three within the last couple years?

I ask because I know a couple very impressive students at S-H (I also know many mediocre students there) and I know a couple mediocre kids at DCI (I also know of very talented kids there). Because DCI is a charter that most people get into via immersion charters, I am certain DCI has more well-resourced kids than S-H and thus probably has more kids likely to have parents hiring tutors just to push and enrich. But when I look at the test scores at the two schools, it doesn't look like DCI is blowing S-H out of the water. In fact they look comparable. Given that and my personal knowledge of kids at both schools, I'm not sure how your observation that only DCI has excellent kids ready for enrichment while ALL the Hill DCPS kids you tutor are behind makes sense. It is contrary to test scores and personal observation. There may in fact be more kids excelling at DCI but it's not the sharp dichotomy you describe. Is it possible that your exposure is too limited to draw these kinds of conclusions?


This “tutor” can’t possibly have a large enough sample size to make generalizations about any school. Also, Oyster Middle blows DCI out of the water when comparing language proficiency. I think all of Oysters 8th graders pass the AP Spanish exam.
Anonymous
Post 12/12/2025 18:19     Subject: DC's School Report Cards are up. Any surprises?

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I have not heard good things about DCI. Their test scores are better than other public MS and HS in the city, but you would expect that based on demographics. From parents who actually have kids there, I have heard that there are staffing issues, the kids spend too much time on Chromebooks, and that beyond the language opportunities which of course are highly valued by families who attend DCI charters, people are not very impressed. There is a perception it is better than their IB MS and HS, but we are talking about families who live in Brookland, LeDroit Parks etc. -- they don't have good IB options for elementary school, much less MS and HS.

As for Capitol Hill families (of which we are one), the main advantage of DCI is the HS option, given how weak Eastern continues to be. However, for MS, DCI seems no better than Stuart-Hobson, beyond the language options. If you look at the "growth to proficiency" ratings on the report card site, S-H and DCI have similar scores. For us, S-H is much closer and offers my kids the option of attending school with neighbors, and participating in activities with kids they've known since they were in kindergarten. S-H has the clear edge.

Neither of these school is amazing, and there are both charter and DCPS options that are worse (I wouldn't send my kid to Two Rivers Young or to Wheatley Education Campus for middle, for instance).

You can find better test scores at upper NW schools though for white and students who are not economically disadvantaged, Deal and Hardy don't do much better -- they just have smaller percentages of students who are economically disadvantaged.

I don't say this to boost S-H -- we are looking at privates for MS and if we get into Latin for 5th we're going there (on the fence about BASIS, I think I'm leaning towards S-H but I don't know, it's a tough choice). Latin is appealing to me because I really like their HS program and like the overall educational approach which is academically challenging but not insanely intense, with good balance. But I don't look at DCI and wish we'd sent our kids to one of the immersion characters we did in fact get into for PK, which would have required long commutes and where I have some reluctance about foundational academics.

So from my perspective as a DC parent, charters have no real advantage over DCPS. There are some good charters but they aren't light years better than our DCPS option -- they are about the same for elementary and middle and then better for HS but not light years better.

I feel bad for the DCI families we know who live on the Hill IB for good elementaries and decent middles, who have spent the last 8 years commuting to Brookland or NW only to be disappointed in DCI. Their kids speak a second language, which is awesome and I know they value that, but it hasn't just solved education for them. All of the DCI families we know are looking at privates right now, just like we are. Which is too bad, honestly.

Public education in DC is hard.


I don’t believe anyone is really looking at privates as it is just cheaper to move and/or get a tutor or Mathnesium/Kumon etc. From my experience, kids at dci can learn 3 languages, not just 2. Math and stem is very strong at DCI, and it offers a strong arts program as well. Plus it has a great feeder with IB Diploma. I don’t know a single family at dci who is “disappointed” but I’m sure they exist. I tutor a lot of kids around the city and the language program at dci is excellent. You can take multiple classes in a foreign language, not just language classes. I do think dci caters to the top and bottom and ignores the middle. In contrast, Latin is great for a middle of the road kid academically. Not too tough but good enough. I heard amazing things about what they can do for the kids at the bottom. They’re doing some great things. Basis is great academically not great for anything else IMHO. I don’t know anything about Hill elementary schools really but I do know a ton about Hill middle schools sadly. I would not characterize them as decent. Every family I tutor is (rightly) concerned that their child is not getting the education they need. If you’re worried about “foundational academics” i would be really worried about any of the Hill middle schools. Sorry.


Of course UMC families with kids at DCI (or in DCPS) look at charters. I mean... of course. People don't want to move, especially right now with the DC market. They also don't want to uproot kids and many people like their neighborhood in Brookland or Tacoma DC or LeDroit or whatever. Yes they also look at tutoring, but if they have real dissatisfaction with public schools and can afford, or stretch to afford private, they will also look at that option. To say "I don't believe parents at these schools are looking at privates" is a bizarre assertion.

I have lived on the East side of DC for over 15 years, have two kids, and know dozens of families. Private school is on the radar for almost everyone except the people who truly just can't afford it (and even they likely look at some of the cheaper parochials! you'd be dumb not to!).
Anonymous
Post 12/12/2025 18:14     Subject: DC's School Report Cards are up. Any surprises?

Anonymous wrote:Im the tutor from above. I will say I also tutor kids who are EXCELLENT and want further enrichment. So just because I tutor at your school doesn’t necessarily mean the kids are behind. But generally, sadly, dcps middle schools are not producing kids who are doing so well that they need enrichment, they’re producing kids who are so behind their parents notice and are rightly worried.


This is a confusing comment, especially when linked with your last one. And I say that as someone with serious reservations about our IB DCPS middle on the Hill.

First, what subject(s) do you tutor? If it's foreign language you need to state that up front because of course DCI is going to have kids kicking butt in foreign language and DCPS middle schools will have kids far behind that. Even kids at Deal and Hardy would be far behind DCI kids in foreign language. A lot of your comments have fixated on the foreign language opportunities at DCI, which I agree are pretty much the best in the city for public schools, but most parents are far less focused on foreign language than on core subjects like math and ELA.

Second, are you saying that the kids you tutor at DCI are all "EXCELLENT" and only getting tutoring for further enrichment, and the kids you tutor at Hill middle schools are all behind and their parents are hiring you because they are worried? That seems to be the implication but if so, just say that.

Third, how many kids do you tutor? Which Hill schools have you tutored kids at? All three? all three within the last couple years?

I ask because I know a couple very impressive students at S-H (I also know many mediocre students there) and I know a couple mediocre kids at DCI (I also know of very talented kids there). Because DCI is a charter that most people get into via immersion charters, I am certain DCI has more well-resourced kids than S-H and thus probably has more kids likely to have parents hiring tutors just to push and enrich. But when I look at the test scores at the two schools, it doesn't look like DCI is blowing S-H out of the water. In fact they look comparable. Given that and my personal knowledge of kids at both schools, I'm not sure how your observation that only DCI has excellent kids ready for enrichment while ALL the Hill DCPS kids you tutor are behind makes sense. It is contrary to test scores and personal observation. There may in fact be more kids excelling at DCI but it's not the sharp dichotomy you describe. Is it possible that your exposure is too limited to draw these kinds of conclusions?
Anonymous
Post 12/12/2025 16:45     Subject: DC's School Report Cards are up. Any surprises?

Different poster: Stuart Hobson had a pretty long waitlist last year. It made substantially fewer OOB offers than Hardy. It is a dcps neighborhood school that serves the eastern side of town. I think it id not worth it to commute to DCI from that side of town, unless or even if you learning a second language is very important to you, someone in your family lives of works in that direction, of you feel that you absolutely must lock in a high school option.
Anonymous
Post 12/12/2025 16:25     Subject: DC's School Report Cards are up. Any surprises?

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Again for those who missed it: Stuart-Hobson has nearly identical CAPE scores and other quantitative metrics to DCI.

DCI has slightly more kids meeting or exceeding expectations in math (60.9% to 57.2%). S-H has slightly more kids meeting or exceeding expectations in ELA (59.9% to 56.8%).

They have near identical chronic absentee rates (just under 20% for both). S-H has a better teacher retention rate (84% to 73%).

S-H is easier to get into OOB than DCI is to get into without coming from a feeder. However, it's not that hard to access a feeder for either school -- if you are willing to change schools in 3rd/4th/5th, both have feeders where you are very likely or guaranteed a spot via lottery.

The biggest advantage of DCI is the HS. For MS, there is no advantage unless the language component is very important to you. If your preferred HS is a private or application school anyway, there's no real difference.



There is a huge advantage to DCI over SH because DCI is able to meet the top students where they are and challenge them. Kids are not in classes with other kids who are 3 or 4 grade levels apart. They actually work to place kids by ability with most subjects, and the only middle school in this city that I know that uses standardized test scores as part of this placement in addition to grades and teachers recs.

So the lower performing kids are not in the same classes as the top performing kids. The top kids get more depth and challenge to meet them where they are. In addition, based on standardized test scores, the lower kids automatically get more classes in ELA, math etc.. instead of an elective so more support. It is not optional, they are placed in it.

This is how DCI is able to meet the needs of both the high and low performing students. In addition, they have high standards to be placed in the higher ability classes. For instance the highest track math class, the requirement is 90% or higher in math on standardized tests. So there are no kids in the class who should not be in it and the class can go deeper and be much more challenging. Not so with DCPS middle schools where OSSE doesn’t believe in tracking because of equity. BTW, DCI has multiple levels of math classes.

Also you should look at test scores more. I suspect lots of kids at SH are getting tutors to try to get the kids up to speed. It sounds like the tutor in this post has lots of these kids from DCPS middle schools in CH.

Lastly, the high school is even better because there are multiple official tracks for kids to actually pick where their interests lies. The school also realizes that not all kids are destined for college and has some vocational tracks that will give kids the skills they need to get jobs after high school.


This part is ironic, because SH uses standardized test scores to track students (as do EH and Jefferson per their open houses).


So does Deal. In fact, my impression is that standardized tests are how DCPS tracks students as a general matter?


That's right. I think the DCI conversations get a little weird because virtually no family at DCI has experience with DCPS (since they all went into charter immersions feeders in ECE).


Yes, it's really odd. At least do a little research before you opine! DCPS definitely does track math in middle school, at least at some schools.

At ITDS, all 8th graders are in algebra (absent a compelling reason not to be) but Geometry placement is based on all available data. That means coursework, class tests, MAP, CAPE, summer school, everything. This probably wouldn't be doable for bigger schools but for a small student body it's manageable. DCI is definitely, definitely not the only middle school that uses testing in math placement.


Can you take algebra 2 as an 8th grader? DCI has that option as well. Curious to see if dcps has that. And what metric do they use to get placement? CAPE?


Deal definitely (and maybe Hardy) offer Algerba 2 to 8th graders (which means if other DCPS schools believed they had a cohort to handle this, they could it it as well). DCPS schools use iReady scores to grant admission to the higher level math classes. You can google iready to learn more about it. It's a comprehensive assessment.
Anonymous
Post 12/12/2025 16:02     Subject: DC's School Report Cards are up. Any surprises?

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Again for those who missed it: Stuart-Hobson has nearly identical CAPE scores and other quantitative metrics to DCI.

DCI has slightly more kids meeting or exceeding expectations in math (60.9% to 57.2%). S-H has slightly more kids meeting or exceeding expectations in ELA (59.9% to 56.8%).

They have near identical chronic absentee rates (just under 20% for both). S-H has a better teacher retention rate (84% to 73%).

S-H is easier to get into OOB than DCI is to get into without coming from a feeder. However, it's not that hard to access a feeder for either school -- if you are willing to change schools in 3rd/4th/5th, both have feeders where you are very likely or guaranteed a spot via lottery.

The biggest advantage of DCI is the HS. For MS, there is no advantage unless the language component is very important to you. If your preferred HS is a private or application school anyway, there's no real difference.



There is a huge advantage to DCI over SH because DCI is able to meet the top students where they are and challenge them. Kids are not in classes with other kids who are 3 or 4 grade levels apart. They actually work to place kids by ability with most subjects, and the only middle school in this city that I know that uses standardized test scores as part of this placement in addition to grades and teachers recs.

So the lower performing kids are not in the same classes as the top performing kids. The top kids get more depth and challenge to meet them where they are. In addition, based on standardized test scores, the lower kids automatically get more classes in ELA, math etc.. instead of an elective so more support. It is not optional, they are placed in it.

This is how DCI is able to meet the needs of both the high and low performing students. In addition, they have high standards to be placed in the higher ability classes. For instance the highest track math class, the requirement is 90% or higher in math on standardized tests. So there are no kids in the class who should not be in it and the class can go deeper and be much more challenging. Not so with DCPS middle schools where OSSE doesn’t believe in tracking because of equity. BTW, DCI has multiple levels of math classes.

Also you should look at test scores more. I suspect lots of kids at SH are getting tutors to try to get the kids up to speed. It sounds like the tutor in this post has lots of these kids from DCPS middle schools in CH.

Lastly, the high school is even better because there are multiple official tracks for kids to actually pick where their interests lies. The school also realizes that not all kids are destined for college and has some vocational tracks that will give kids the skills they need to get jobs after high school.


This part is ironic, because SH uses standardized test scores to track students (as do EH and Jefferson per their open houses).


So does Deal. In fact, my impression is that standardized tests are how DCPS tracks students as a general matter?


That's right. I think the DCI conversations get a little weird because virtually no family at DCI has experience with DCPS (since they all went into charter immersions feeders in ECE).


This whole conversation seems like a big cope for a DCI parent trying to justify to themselves that the years and years of ES and MS commutes were "worth it."


+1. I think this is one parent who posts extensively and persistently every time DCI is mentioned. They probably have a middle school Student that hasn’t even been there a year.


Someone posted (probably you): “I feel bad for the DCI families we know who live on the Hill IB for good elementaries and decent middles, who have spent the last 8 years commuting to Brookland or NW only to be disappointed in DCI. Their kids speak a second language, which is awesome and I know they value that, but it hasn't just solved education for them. All of the DCI families we know are looking at privates right now, just like we are. Which is too bad, honestly.”

I don’t know any family that regrets learning Spanish, French or Chinese but you sure seem to think it’s worthless. I also know of no family at DCI that is “looking at privates”. Don’t feel sorry for kids at DCI. They’re doing great.


No. I am not that PP. My kids are at a DCI feeder and we have spoken to a wide range of families at DCI so we can make an informed decision. We hear a lot of great things, but there is enough negative stuff about tech usage, staffing, and behavior that gives us pause. Any time someone mentions DCI there is a long winded post that makes it seem perfect when that’s definitely not the case.
Anonymous
Post 12/12/2025 15:50     Subject: Re:DC's School Report Cards are up. Any surprises?

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I don’t have a solution to the problem with schools in this city. But as an educated UMC family EOTP, charters are what kept us in the city to make it work.

We were at an immersion charter and now at DCI as a new family this year. We were at an event this weekend and met a number of other DCI families and wow the backgrounds of these families were impressive - lawyers, CIO, educational executives, etc…. It was also a very diverse group with blacks, white, asians.

It is quite obvious to me now that educated UMC families of all backgrounds and ethnicities are congregating and coalescing among the few acceptable charters for middle school EOTP. It is not by chance that there were so many accomplished families in one event.


If I could send my kid to Stuart-Hobson I totally would. DC is at a supposedly desirable EOTP charter but meh.


I think this is the same Stuart Hobson booster but if it’s a real post I invite you do so some research on the school. It’s objectively a poor performing school.


It’s really not. It has a good OSSE report card with solid performance and growth scores. Its top kids do well on tests and in HS admissions, while having a very robust MS experience with great ECs and truly excellent performance arts. It’s not an accident that SH got over 20 kids into Duke last year. I’m not sure why anyone thinks there’s on SH booster.


Duke Ellington is a performing arts school. It’s not an academic powerhouse. I mean I am thrilled if kids who are good at performance do well here, but the reality is that SH has very little to do with it. Furthermore, the “honors” classes are not even grade level. Kids do really poorly on standardized tests. “Truly excellent” performing arts is 100% in the eye of the booster. I’m glad you’re happy but I’m really glad my kids don’t attend Stuart Hobson.


SH doesn't have "honors" classes; it does track kids, but not like that. So it's interesting that you have opinions on classes that literally don't exist. Why do people come on DCUM to post nonsense about schools they have no connection to? Look, obviously demographics (and, particularly, at risk %age) play into overall test scores and SH is 29% at risk, but if you look at just white kids (since they are virtually certainly to be close to 0% at risk at any DC school), SH actually outperforms BASIS and Hardy and DCI and Latin on ELA CAPE (looking at 4s + 5s); in Math, it's still ahead of all of those schools except for BASIS, which is only at 2% more. Tell me again about the non-grade level classes and kids doing "really poorly"...

I want to be clear that I am not trashing any of those schools. I would have sent me DD to Latin if she lotteried in, because I would love to have a HS plan. She has friends who are very happy at BASIS and if we lived IB for Hardy, I assume she'd go there happily. Also, there are other unnamed schools doing equally well or even better by the metric I just looked at, like Jefferson and Elliot Hine and ITS and Truth. The point is that there are actually a bunch of MS out there working for kids all of which have various pluses and minuses and this weird DCUM line that UMC Hill kids at a school like SH are looking for "easy classes" and or somehow not getting fundamentals is crazy. People hire tutors in MS because their kids aren't doing well... so it's not shocking to hear that the tutor works with kids who aren't doing well at Hill MSes. I'm sure there are plenty of those too! (And it's fair to say that I don't know any parents at SH who hire an individual tutor for "enrichment" given all of the free enrichment offered by the school, so that doesn't really surprise me either. Maybe there are MSes with less on offer where that's more attractive?)


I am thrilled you are so optimistic about Stuart Hobson. However for those who have actual children and are thinking about it you should be aware that the offerings are poor, grade level at Stuart Hobson is considered doing really well, and kids are not being taught well there. Sorry not sorry. Same applies for Truth (actually Stuart would probably be better than truth). Hine has an IB program which is a good curriculum. Finally the reason you don’t know any kids who get a tutor for further enrichment is my biggest issue with SH- kids are just not ambitious. I’m seeing kids who are struggling and not motivated.But if that’s okay with you, fantastic. But lie to less privileged kids who don’t know they’ll be okay. It’s not a good school. It won’t meet your kids needs. If you know your privileged kids will be totally fine whatever happens- go for it. Enjoy the easy commute. But for those less sure, do everything you can to get into another school including moving.


I'm not quite sure what you're talking about. I thought I made it clear that my "actual" kid is at SH now. I'm not "optimistic," I am literally experiencing it. An individual tutor is an extremely poor form of enrichment in my book -- sorry to trash your business model if that's who you're trying to sucker in by saying smart kids doing well who don't have tutors aren't "ambitious" (what??). My kid does tons of enrichment, both in the school and outside it. None of it involves a tutor. Less privileged kids don't hire a private tutor either, so I am not sure how you can speak for them at a school you don't have kids at. You seem to have a very weird axe to grind with DCPS.


No axe to grind and I take several clients pro bono. What I do find irritating are parents like yourself who overstate the positives about how great their child’s school is to make themselves feel good about their choices. Less privileged families with less opportunities feel that this school is good if privileged families are there. I am genuinely profoundly glad you’re happy there and optimistic about the school in general but the grim reality is that if you want to send your child to a school that will properly prepare them for high school and college, Stuart Hobson is not it.


Can you please explain what positives you think I've "overstated"? I quoted direct CAPE data, which shows that non-at risk children there perform on par or better than alternative middle schools. I said there was a lot of free enrichment available at the school. I do actually agree with the PP that the school has excellent performing arts, though I didn't say that. You, on the other hand, have repeatedly disparaged SH across the board ("the grim reality is that if you want to send your child to a school that will properly prepare them for high school and college, Stuart Hobson is not it") based on... anecdotal experience from a few kids you tutor? I genuinely think you should consider what your motives are here and why you think you know so much about multiple schools from a handful of struggling students (since in previous posts you also bashed EH, Jefferson and Truth).


NP. Your experience is anecdotal of one. The tutor does both enrichment and helps struggling students from many schools who has no skin in this game, He is much ore objective than you. He can assess much better than you where kids are and should be.


The PP actually said they hadn't worked with good SH students because SH students weren't "ambitious" enough to hire tutors for enrichment. So... a few struggling SH students. And the DC CAPE data actually isn't anecdotal. If you want to check out SH's enrichments for yourself, I'd recommend the @stuarthobsonms, @stuarthobsondramaplayers, @shms_inst_mus, @shms6grade and @stuarthobsonms_athletics accounts as a good place to start.


As proof that I’m not boosting, please see these booster accounts.

Stop trying to get strangers to justify your choices, thanks.


Sorry, no dog in this fight at all, but you regard a school’s own social media sites — cited only as evidence of a wide range of enrichments being available — as booster accounts? I cannot possibly take you seriously.


Do you think the social media accounts are offering a critical insight into the school with multiple perspectives? Or are they (rightly) boosting up the school? I can’t take you seriously either but I didn’t take you seriously when you started to act like everyone was trying to get into Stuart and the waitlist was so super long etc.


A critical insight into the availability of enrichments? Come on. You are arguing just to argue. Obviously the school itself is the best place to find out what activities it has available.
Anonymous
Post 12/12/2025 15:44     Subject: Re:DC's School Report Cards are up. Any surprises?

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
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Anonymous wrote:I don’t have a solution to the problem with schools in this city. But as an educated UMC family EOTP, charters are what kept us in the city to make it work.

We were at an immersion charter and now at DCI as a new family this year. We were at an event this weekend and met a number of other DCI families and wow the backgrounds of these families were impressive - lawyers, CIO, educational executives, etc…. It was also a very diverse group with blacks, white, asians.

It is quite obvious to me now that educated UMC families of all backgrounds and ethnicities are congregating and coalescing among the few acceptable charters for middle school EOTP. It is not by chance that there were so many accomplished families in one event.


If I could send my kid to Stuart-Hobson I totally would. DC is at a supposedly desirable EOTP charter but meh.


I think this is the same Stuart Hobson booster but if it’s a real post I invite you do so some research on the school. It’s objectively a poor performing school.


It’s really not. It has a good OSSE report card with solid performance and growth scores. Its top kids do well on tests and in HS admissions, while having a very robust MS experience with great ECs and truly excellent performance arts. It’s not an accident that SH got over 20 kids into Duke last year. I’m not sure why anyone thinks there’s on SH booster.


Duke Ellington is a performing arts school. It’s not an academic powerhouse. I mean I am thrilled if kids who are good at performance do well here, but the reality is that SH has very little to do with it. Furthermore, the “honors” classes are not even grade level. Kids do really poorly on standardized tests. “Truly excellent” performing arts is 100% in the eye of the booster. I’m glad you’re happy but I’m really glad my kids don’t attend Stuart Hobson.


SH doesn't have "honors" classes; it does track kids, but not like that. So it's interesting that you have opinions on classes that literally don't exist. Why do people come on DCUM to post nonsense about schools they have no connection to? Look, obviously demographics (and, particularly, at risk %age) play into overall test scores and SH is 29% at risk, but if you look at just white kids (since they are virtually certainly to be close to 0% at risk at any DC school), SH actually outperforms BASIS and Hardy and DCI and Latin on ELA CAPE (looking at 4s + 5s); in Math, it's still ahead of all of those schools except for BASIS, which is only at 2% more. Tell me again about the non-grade level classes and kids doing "really poorly"...

I want to be clear that I am not trashing any of those schools. I would have sent me DD to Latin if she lotteried in, because I would love to have a HS plan. She has friends who are very happy at BASIS and if we lived IB for Hardy, I assume she'd go there happily. Also, there are other unnamed schools doing equally well or even better by the metric I just looked at, like Jefferson and Elliot Hine and ITS and Truth. The point is that there are actually a bunch of MS out there working for kids all of which have various pluses and minuses and this weird DCUM line that UMC Hill kids at a school like SH are looking for "easy classes" and or somehow not getting fundamentals is crazy. People hire tutors in MS because their kids aren't doing well... so it's not shocking to hear that the tutor works with kids who aren't doing well at Hill MSes. I'm sure there are plenty of those too! (And it's fair to say that I don't know any parents at SH who hire an individual tutor for "enrichment" given all of the free enrichment offered by the school, so that doesn't really surprise me either. Maybe there are MSes with less on offer where that's more attractive?)


I am thrilled you are so optimistic about Stuart Hobson. However for those who have actual children and are thinking about it you should be aware that the offerings are poor, grade level at Stuart Hobson is considered doing really well, and kids are not being taught well there. Sorry not sorry. Same applies for Truth (actually Stuart would probably be better than truth). Hine has an IB program which is a good curriculum. Finally the reason you don’t know any kids who get a tutor for further enrichment is my biggest issue with SH- kids are just not ambitious. I’m seeing kids who are struggling and not motivated.But if that’s okay with you, fantastic. But lie to less privileged kids who don’t know they’ll be okay. It’s not a good school. It won’t meet your kids needs. If you know your privileged kids will be totally fine whatever happens- go for it. Enjoy the easy commute. But for those less sure, do everything you can to get into another school including moving.


I'm not quite sure what you're talking about. I thought I made it clear that my "actual" kid is at SH now. I'm not "optimistic," I am literally experiencing it. An individual tutor is an extremely poor form of enrichment in my book -- sorry to trash your business model if that's who you're trying to sucker in by saying smart kids doing well who don't have tutors aren't "ambitious" (what??). My kid does tons of enrichment, both in the school and outside it. None of it involves a tutor. Less privileged kids don't hire a private tutor either, so I am not sure how you can speak for them at a school you don't have kids at. You seem to have a very weird axe to grind with DCPS.


No axe to grind and I take several clients pro bono. What I do find irritating are parents like yourself who overstate the positives about how great their child’s school is to make themselves feel good about their choices. Less privileged families with less opportunities feel that this school is good if privileged families are there. I am genuinely profoundly glad you’re happy there and optimistic about the school in general but the grim reality is that if you want to send your child to a school that will properly prepare them for high school and college, Stuart Hobson is not it.


Can you please explain what positives you think I've "overstated"? I quoted direct CAPE data, which shows that non-at risk children there perform on par or better than alternative middle schools. I said there was a lot of free enrichment available at the school. I do actually agree with the PP that the school has excellent performing arts, though I didn't say that. You, on the other hand, have repeatedly disparaged SH across the board ("the grim reality is that if you want to send your child to a school that will properly prepare them for high school and college, Stuart Hobson is not it") based on... anecdotal experience from a few kids you tutor? I genuinely think you should consider what your motives are here and why you think you know so much about multiple schools from a handful of struggling students (since in previous posts you also bashed EH, Jefferson and Truth).


NP. Your experience is anecdotal of one. The tutor does both enrichment and helps struggling students from many schools who has no skin in this game, He is much ore objective than you. He can assess much better than you where kids are and should be.


The PP actually said they hadn't worked with good SH students because SH students weren't "ambitious" enough to hire tutors for enrichment. So... a few struggling SH students. And the DC CAPE data actually isn't anecdotal. If you want to check out SH's enrichments for yourself, I'd recommend the @stuarthobsonms, @stuarthobsondramaplayers, @shms_inst_mus, @shms6grade and @stuarthobsonms_athletics accounts as a good place to start.


As proof that I’m not boosting, please see these booster accounts.

Stop trying to get strangers to justify your choices, thanks.


Sorry, no dog in this fight at all, but you regard a school’s own social media sites — cited only as evidence of a wide range of enrichments being available — as booster accounts? I cannot possibly take you seriously.


Do you think the social media accounts are offering a critical insight into the school with multiple perspectives? Or are they (rightly) boosting up the school? I can’t take you seriously either but I didn’t take you seriously when you started to act like everyone was trying to get into Stuart and the waitlist was so super long etc.
Anonymous
Post 12/12/2025 15:43     Subject: DC's School Report Cards are up. Any surprises?

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I have not heard good things about DCI. Their test scores are better than other public MS and HS in the city, but you would expect that based on demographics. From parents who actually have kids there, I have heard that there are staffing issues, the kids spend too much time on Chromebooks, and that beyond the language opportunities which of course are highly valued by families who attend DCI charters, people are not very impressed. There is a perception it is better than their IB MS and HS, but we are talking about families who live in Brookland, LeDroit Parks etc. -- they don't have good IB options for elementary school, much less MS and HS.

As for Capitol Hill families (of which we are one), the main advantage of DCI is the HS option, given how weak Eastern continues to be. However, for MS, DCI seems no better than Stuart-Hobson, beyond the language options. If you look at the "growth to proficiency" ratings on the report card site, S-H and DCI have similar scores. For us, S-H is much closer and offers my kids the option of attending school with neighbors, and participating in activities with kids they've known since they were in kindergarten. S-H has the clear edge.

Neither of these school is amazing, and there are both charter and DCPS options that are worse (I wouldn't send my kid to Two Rivers Young or to Wheatley Education Campus for middle, for instance).

You can find better test scores at upper NW schools though for white and students who are not economically disadvantaged, Deal and Hardy don't do much better -- they just have smaller percentages of students who are economically disadvantaged.

I don't say this to boost S-H -- we are looking at privates for MS and if we get into Latin for 5th we're going there (on the fence about BASIS, I think I'm leaning towards S-H but I don't know, it's a tough choice). Latin is appealing to me because I really like their HS program and like the overall educational approach which is academically challenging but not insanely intense, with good balance. But I don't look at DCI and wish we'd sent our kids to one of the immersion characters we did in fact get into for PK, which would have required long commutes and where I have some reluctance about foundational academics.

So from my perspective as a DC parent, charters have no real advantage over DCPS. There are some good charters but they aren't light years better than our DCPS option -- they are about the same for elementary and middle and then better for HS but not light years better.

I feel bad for the DCI families we know who live on the Hill IB for good elementaries and decent middles, who have spent the last 8 years commuting to Brookland or NW only to be disappointed in DCI. Their kids speak a second language, which is awesome and I know they value that, but it hasn't just solved education for them. All of the DCI families we know are looking at privates right now, just like we are. Which is too bad, honestly.

Public education in DC is hard.


I don’t believe anyone is really looking at privates as it is just cheaper to move and/or get a tutor or Mathnesium/Kumon etc. From my experience, kids at dci can learn 3 languages, not just 2. Math and stem is very strong at DCI, and it offers a strong arts program as well. Plus it has a great feeder with IB Diploma. I don’t know a single family at dci who is “disappointed” but I’m sure they exist. I tutor a lot of kids around the city and the language program at dci is excellent. You can take multiple classes in a foreign language, not just language classes. I do think dci caters to the top and bottom and ignores the middle. In contrast, Latin is great for a middle of the road kid academically. Not too tough but good enough. I heard amazing things about what they can do for the kids at the bottom. They’re doing some great things. Basis is great academically not great for anything else IMHO. I don’t know anything about Hill elementary schools really but I do know a ton about Hill middle schools sadly. I would not characterize them as decent. Every family I tutor is (rightly) concerned that their child is not getting the education they need. If you’re worried about “foundational academics” i would be really worried about any of the Hill middle schools. Sorry.


This is the sad truth for a lot of the middle of the road DCPS schools (it's obviously true for the worst ones). We also know parents who are just pushing through, kind of worried, and hoping for an application high school on the other side. and I talked to a teacher at one of these mediocre DCPS schools who said that her hands are tied for various reasons, and she knows they are sending kids to Walls and Banneker who are totally unprepared for rigorous work.

Parents and teachers seem to be on the same side of this (wanting more challening work from DCPS for the middle school students who can handle it) and for some reason central office is taking the opposite side.

How do we solve that problem?


Very sadly I’ve heard this over and over as well. Lots of sadness relating to having smart kids held back due to administrative issues and those kids just getting bored of school over time.