Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The building itself leaves a lot to be desired. That said, it's a short walk to the very nice recreation center, near the bike trail and to be thoughtfully opened by dedicated educators from the 2nd street campus. We'll be snapping up our WL spot when offered. We consider ourselves lucky to have the potential opportunity to be a part of the new campus from the beginning.
Keep your fingers crossed with the principal. I have no idea why they would choose someone who is not even physically here to prepare for the opening and who might not be here when the campus opens if the visa issue isn’t resolved.
Anonymous wrote:The Latin 2 list will hustle. 6th grade parents will likely take because 2-3 years here will get them to a high school also they are most lottery desperate. 5th grade parents need to think long and hard about if they will be willing to commute differently (east of the river or not) after two years. There's no transfer preference.
The warehouse facilities are bleaker than bleak. Those who argue otherwise haven't dipped in or tried to do a school pickup in the bad school and warehouse and metrobus vortex in the last three years.
Also, knowing there's several schools literally a stones throw away that have populations that are largely at-risk but that Cooper hasn't filled their at risk preference seats (which opting is is awesome and commendable).
The DCPCSB needs to put a pause on new charters ONLY IN WARD FIVE.
Charters are choosing terrible facilities to try to balance charter approval (WE RESOLVE THE ACHIEVEMENT GAP) with "we can't find space", but I, can find giant swaths of commercial and underused building space east of the river. Even Wildflower DC found a solution.
Anonymous wrote:Parents are desperate enough to cleave to their happy lives in Wards 5 and 6 not to mind the warehouse. I don’t see the permanent campus across the River. If Latin wanted a Ward 7 or 8 location, they would already have selected one.
Anonymous wrote:I hope you're right, but doubt it. I'm under the impression that at least half the 4th graders in my kid's class in a DCPS elementary school EOTP who tried for Basis, Latin1 and Latin 2 didn't get spots.
Hardly anybody seems interested in our by right middle school and I'm not hearing much about plans to go private. Spots in acceptable programs seem scarcer than ever this year. I'm just not feeling optimistic about our 5th-12th grade prospects in DC public schools right now.
Anonymous wrote:The Latin 2 list will hustle. 6th grade parents will likely take because 2-3 years here will get them to a high school also they are most lottery desperate. 5th grade parents need to think long and hard about if they will be willing to commute differently (east of the river or not) after two years. There's no transfer preference.
The warehouse facilities are bleaker than bleak. Those who argue otherwise haven't dipped in or tried to do a school pickup in the bad school and warehouse and metrobus vortex in the last three years.
Also, knowing there's several schools literally a stones throw away that have populations that are largely at-risk but that Cooper hasn't filled their at risk preference seats (which opting is is awesome and commendable).
The DCPCSB needs to put a pause on new charters ONLY IN WARD FIVE.
Charters are choosing terrible facilities to try to balance charter approval (WE RESOLVE THE ACHIEVEMENT GAP) with "we can't find space", but I, can find giant swaths of commercial and underused building space east of the river. Even Wildflower DC found a solution.
Anonymous wrote:The building itself leaves a lot to be desired. That said, it's a short walk to the very nice recreation center, near the bike trail and to be thoughtfully opened by dedicated educators from the 2nd street campus. We'll be snapping up our WL spot when offered. We consider ourselves lucky to have the potential opportunity to be a part of the new campus from the beginning.
Anonymous wrote:I hope you're right, but doubt it. I'm under the impression that at least half the 4th graders in my kid's class in a DCPS elementary school EOTP who tried for Basis, Latin1 and Latin 2 didn't get spots.
Hardly anybody seems interested in our by right middle school and I'm not hearing much about plans to go private. Spots in acceptable programs seem scarcer than ever this year. I'm just not feeling optimistic about our 5th-12th grade prospects in DC public schools right now.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Latin Cooper is right next to Extra Space Storage!
I'm the Dew Drop Inn poster. I think their building is what used to be Extra Space storage. Or maybe there's another.
It's also next to a liquor store on Franklin that's kind of shady. Kinda weird, I know but I want my kiddo to live/learn in an urban setting as kiddo has been.
I want the opposite of walking onto Landon's campus.
Not saying that the burbs are bad. Just different strokes for different folks. We have NoVa burn family that when they visit don't even know how to cross a city street. And when we visit them kiddos are bored as hell.
16 kids per class & teachers that care, windowless building next to a dive bar, metro, bike path. I WANT that.
Fine for 5th, but if they're in that building for 3 or 4 years, my kid will be missing out. We want more than teachers that care - my kids have that at home in the form of parents with multiple grad degrees and au pairs. We want playing fields/sports, music, art, a good library, nice science labs, debate team, school newspaper, robotics etc.
Cooper is not going to have any of the above being in that building. Even if they find a new location in year 2-4, it likely won’t have any of the above either, not when you are starting a campus with such a small class.
Who knows. Latin1 seems to have all that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Latin Cooper is right next to Extra Space Storage!
I'm the Dew Drop Inn poster. I think their building is what used to be Extra Space storage. Or maybe there's another.
It's also next to a liquor store on Franklin that's kind of shady. Kinda weird, I know but I want my kiddo to live/learn in an urban setting as kiddo has been.
I want the opposite of walking onto Landon's campus.
Not saying that the burbs are bad. Just different strokes for different folks. We have NoVa burn family that when they visit don't even know how to cross a city street. And when we visit them kiddos are bored as hell.
16 kids per class & teachers that care, windowless building next to a dive bar, metro, bike path. I WANT that.
Fine for 5th, but if they're in that building for 3 or 4 years, my kid will be missing out. We want more than teachers that care - my kids have that at home in the form of parents with multiple grad degrees and au pairs. We want playing fields/sports, music, art, a good library, nice science labs, debate team, school newspaper, robotics etc.
Cooper is not going to have any of the above being in that building. Even if they find a new location in year 2-4, it likely won’t have any of the above either, not when you are starting a campus with such a small class.
Anonymous wrote:I hope you're right, but doubt it. I'm under the impression that at least half the 4th graders in my kid's class in a DCPS elementary school EOTP who tried for Basis, Latin1 and Latin 2 didn't get spots.
Hardly anybody seems interested in our by right middle school and I'm not hearing much about plans to go private. Spots in acceptable programs seem scarcer than ever this year. I'm just not feeling optimistic about our 5th-12th grade prospects in DC public schools right now.