Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:At least the charters are catering to the middle class in D.C. Without charters, there probably would be even less middle class residents.
The challenge of this thread I think is how to duplicate some of the charters' success in elementary schools. Boundary review, combined with incentives to retain middle class students at the schools (like advanced classes and so forth) are one of the obvious approaches.
What?
Most charters are serving mostly disadvantaged kids with a very few exceptions.
Anonymous wrote:At least the charters are catering to the middle class in D.C. Without charters, there probably would be even less middle class residents.
The challenge of this thread I think is how to duplicate some of the charters' success in elementary schools. Boundary review, combined with incentives to retain middle class students at the schools (like advanced classes and so forth) are one of the obvious approaches.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Poverty and race go hand in hand in dc. It’s not racist to point that out.
WRONG. All low income in DC may be AA or Hispanic but not all Hispanic or AA are low income. PP ought to mean what’s she says and say what she means. Her comment was racist. Period. I get it that you and other PPs coming to her defense don’t understand. I deal with people like you every day. Regardless it was a racist comment. She and you should take this as a learning opportunity so a not to generalize about people and kids in the future. You live in DC. And whether you like it or not, there are minorities that live here, rich and poor. And no, you should not let your dog poop at a private university campus.
That’s not what I said but ok.
What conclusion should one come to with this statement: “I think a lot of schools that are like 99% black/Latino face these issues.”
Why not just say “I think a lot of schools that are like 99% low income face these issues.”
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Poverty and race go hand in hand in dc. It’s not racist to point that out.
WRONG. All low income in DC may be AA or Hispanic but not all Hispanic or AA are low income. PP ought to mean what’s she says and say what she means. Her comment was racist. Period. I get it that you and other PPs coming to her defense don’t understand. I deal with people like you every day. Regardless it was a racist comment. She and you should take this as a learning opportunity so a not to generalize about people and kids in the future. You live in DC. And whether you like it or not, there are minorities that live here, rich and poor. And no, you should not let your dog poop at a private university campus.
That’s not what I said but ok.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Poverty and race go hand in hand in dc. It’s not racist to point that out.
WRONG. All low income in DC may be AA or Hispanic but not all Hispanic or AA are low income. PP ought to mean what’s she says and say what she means. Her comment was racist. Period. I get it that you and other PPs coming to her defense don’t understand. I deal with people like you every day. Regardless it was a racist comment. She and you should take this as a learning opportunity so a not to generalize about people and kids in the future. You live in DC. And whether you like it or not, there are minorities that live here, rich and poor. And no, you should not let your dog poop at a private university campus.
Anonymous wrote:PP in DC it’s a fact
That the majority of low income families are AA or Latino. Of course that doesn’t mean all AA or Latino families are
Also poor. But these are the demographic facts in DC.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Poverty and race go hand in hand in dc. It’s not racist to point that out.
WRONG. All low income in DC may be AA or Hispanic but not all Hispanic or AA are low income. PP ought to mean what’s she says and say what she means. Her comment was racist. Period. I get it that you and other PPs coming to her defense don’t understand. I deal with people like you every day. Regardless it was a racist comment. She and you should take this as a learning opportunity so a not to generalize about people and kids in the future. You live in DC. And whether you like it or not, there are minorities that live here, rich and poor. And no, you should not let your dog poop at a private university campus.
Anonymous wrote:Poverty and race go hand in hand in dc. It’s not racist to point that out.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I honestly think people in here are upset about over crowding but don’t really care what is done about it as long as their child gets to stay in a “good” school and feeder. I don’t think anyone here cares enough about low performing schools to actively try to change anything for the better.
This is true. I don’t care about low performing schools. I don’t live there. It’s not my issue to fix. I’m here for my kids and their education in my community. Anyone who tells you anything else is either working for someone or lying to you.
Anonymous wrote:I honestly think people in here are upset about over crowding but don’t really care what is done about it as long as their child gets to stay in a “good” school and feeder. I don’t think anyone here cares enough about low performing schools to actively try to change anything for the better.
Anonymous wrote:Yes. By the time of the boundary review it will be clear that all of the WITP schools are full. That will be a key fact.
We get to make choices about that. Fundamentally I see three choices, maybe four.
First, we can decide to go along with the residential segregation and transportation patterns and say they’re full and out-of-boundary students are basically excluded. Sounds bad, but it might have the most impact for neighborhoods from which students travel west for elementary and feed upward in terms of keeping their best students in those schools.
Second, we could keep everything the same and start construction WOTP to meet demand. Build out bigger elementary schools, build more middle and high schools.
Third, we could make a rule that reserves some spots in each of these schools for OOB students. Maybe based on at-risk status and maybe not. Would have good effects but could create stigma. Could exclude or include people who don’t need access to schools like this.
Fourth, we could equalize further by establishing a lottery not tied to residence of applicant, i.e., no inboundary preference. I see this as the best choice functionally but politically unachievable. This forum’s reaction to that choice is always that every person with a better than 9th grade education and a tent will move to some suburb and leave DC to the zombies if that’s even mentioned and while that’s handwringing bullshit it’s politically reflective of something for sure. That’s why I only say it’s 3 choices really.
Other choices like choice grouped pyramids were run up the flagpole and failed during the last go round. I doubt we’re more likely to turn those choices into reality than last time.
What do you all think?