Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:FYI, Boston Latin (and other former exam schools in Boston) have changed how they select, and now do a combination of standardized test scores, grades, geographic diversity (i.e. making sure they accept from the poorer elementary schools in the city, and being in foster care, homeless, or public housing gets you a boost. https://www.bostonpublicschools.org/site/Default.aspx?PageID=9035
Wow, that’s a complex system. Scores, grades, random numbers, and 10 SES tiers, plus ranked preference among the 3 exam schools and capped waitlists that are also subdivided by tiers. Might work for Walls, Banneker, and McKinley, but all three schools would have to give up a lot of independence. DCPS seems to be pretty decentralized compared to Boston (or NYC).
Anonymous wrote:FYI, Boston Latin (and other former exam schools in Boston) have changed how they select, and now do a combination of standardized test scores, grades, geographic diversity (i.e. making sure they accept from the poorer elementary schools in the city, and being in foster care, homeless, or public housing gets you a boost. https://www.bostonpublicschools.org/site/Default.aspx?PageID=9035
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I actually don’t think we have the demand pull for this - privates have fulfilled this need for a long time.
Don't agree and I've lived in Ward 6 since the early 90s. What used to happen in DC was that UMC families, mostly government employees, would buy a house for a few hundred thousand dollars, leaving them with the dough for privates. Now, a time when any decent halfway decent 3-bedroom house in Georgetown, or AU Park, or Capitol Hill etc. runs you more than a million dollars, things are different. Privates where tuition is 30-45K and fi aid generally isn't available for parents earning six figures has put these programs out of reach for a much higher % of DC families than 30 years ago. Moreover, far more UMC families of teens are staying in the city than did in the 80s, 90s and early 2000s, especially EotP. Droves of parents who wouldn't have touched DCPS past elementary school just 10 years ago are taking the leap. A steady rise in applications not just to Walls but to Banneker and Ellington in the last decade is proof of these trends.
I think this is correct but it’s also the reason that bringing back the exam at Walls is not the answer. Walls is just too small to satisfy the kind of increased demand this poster is talking about. And what’s more, these parents aren’t seeking the super-elite, majority-Asian, mini TJ/Stuyvesant magnet school that some posters on this thread seem to dream of. The DC parents just want a decent college prep program. That’s what Walls was, before gentrification. But now there’s more demand for college prep programs, and Walls can’t expand. So right now, an exam that funnels the highest-scoring 8th graders into one tiny school would undercut efforts to expand college prep capacity elsewhere, while also excluding a lot of solid college-bound students from Capitol Hill and elsewhere.
A rec league teammate was telling me his dad lied about residency to go to McKinley back in the day, its reputation used to be a lot stronger. Heck Dunbar used to be incredible in the 50s (and was gutted for Banneker). DC has some pretty seriously under enrolled high schools they can use to create strong college prep courses and maybe lessen the load on JR, Walls, and Banneker.
Given Dunbars latest reworking of the curriculum this path seems unlikely.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I actually don’t think we have the demand pull for this - privates have fulfilled this need for a long time.
Don't agree and I've lived in Ward 6 since the early 90s. What used to happen in DC was that UMC families, mostly government employees, would buy a house for a few hundred thousand dollars, leaving them with the dough for privates. Now, a time when any decent halfway decent 3-bedroom house in Georgetown, or AU Park, or Capitol Hill etc. runs you more than a million dollars, things are different. Privates where tuition is 30-45K and fi aid generally isn't available for parents earning six figures has put these programs out of reach for a much higher % of DC families than 30 years ago. Moreover, far more UMC families of teens are staying in the city than did in the 80s, 90s and early 2000s, especially EotP. Droves of parents who wouldn't have touched DCPS past elementary school just 10 years ago are taking the leap. A steady rise in applications not just to Walls but to Banneker and Ellington in the last decade is proof of these trends.
I think this is correct but it’s also the reason that bringing back the exam at Walls is not the answer. Walls is just too small to satisfy the kind of increased demand this poster is talking about. And what’s more, these parents aren’t seeking the super-elite, majority-Asian, mini TJ/Stuyvesant magnet school that some posters on this thread seem to dream of. The DC parents just want a decent college prep program. That’s what Walls was, before gentrification. But now there’s more demand for college prep programs, and Walls can’t expand. So right now, an exam that funnels the highest-scoring 8th graders into one tiny school would undercut efforts to expand college prep capacity elsewhere, while also excluding a lot of solid college-bound students from Capitol Hill and elsewhere.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I actually don’t think we have the demand pull for this - privates have fulfilled this need for a long time.
Don't agree and I've lived in Ward 6 since the early 90s. What used to happen in DC was that UMC families, mostly government employees, would buy a house for a few hundred thousand dollars, leaving them with the dough for privates. Now, a time when any decent halfway decent 3-bedroom house in Georgetown, or AU Park, or Capitol Hill etc. runs you more than a million dollars, things are different. Privates where tuition is 30-45K and fi aid generally isn't available for parents earning six figures has put these programs out of reach for a much higher % of DC families than 30 years ago. Moreover, far more UMC families of teens are staying in the city than did in the 80s, 90s and early 2000s, especially EotP. Droves of parents who wouldn't have touched DCPS past elementary school just 10 years ago are taking the leap. A steady rise in applications not just to Walls but to Banneker and Ellington in the last decade is proof of these trends.
Anonymous wrote:What benefit does an entrance exam publicly funded school serve the wider community and what is the return on investing tax dollars in that versus anything else? Have there been any studies done?
Anonymous wrote:I actually don’t think we have the demand pull for this - privates have fulfilled this need for a long time.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It just seems like "bring the test back to Walls" is such a doable request that makes a ton of sense, would be easy for them to implement (because they used to) and seems to have near unanimous support here. Can we just push for that?
Push away. Beat your head against a wall if you wish. But Bowser won't bring the test back, or an external standardized test score (PARCC, PSAT 8/9) with an application either. The problem is that UMC-fueled political pushback can't amount to much without the demographics to build a critical mass of political support. This says to me that tests in DCPS HS magnet admissions won't be back as long as our current mayor is in office, or during the tenure of a crony who succeeds her either, if that's in the cards.
Bringing back the test makes large swaths of kids ineligible for the school. Keeping Walls open to the whole city where most schools aren't preparing kids to do well on any standardized test including math is a better political move than bringing back tests and restricting Walls to a handful of UMC schools.
It is a f***g magnet school with selective admissions.
UVA is a highly-regarded university with selective admissions; they still turn away high-scoring kids from Fairfax to make room for lower-scoring kids from rural counties, to maintain political support in the Virginia legislature. Same with UMD turning away high-scoring kids from Montgomery County.
Just because a school has selective admissions does not make it exempt from political reality.
Then why does pretty much every big urban center except for Washington DC have magnet schools that administer an entrance exam?
Is NYC exempt from political reality? New York? Chicago? Philadelphia? Boston?
Stop making excuses. And stop making dumb comparisons. Comparing School Without Walls Magnet High School to the University of Virginia and not to, say, the NYC magnet high schools schools is just idiotic.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It just seems like "bring the test back to Walls" is such a doable request that makes a ton of sense, would be easy for them to implement (because they used to) and seems to have near unanimous support here. Can we just push for that?
Why just Walls? Why not Banneker, McKinley, etc. also? G&T programs don't start in HS. Most on this board assume their kid will be admitted to Walls. That's why it's always some reason why it didn't happen and the blame game starts. If you want buy in, go all the way.
Great point. But we all know why no one on this forum is concerned about a test for Banneker or McKinley.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It just seems like "bring the test back to Walls" is such a doable request that makes a ton of sense, would be easy for them to implement (because they used to) and seems to have near unanimous support here. Can we just push for that?
Why just Walls? Why not Banneker, McKinley, etc. also? G&T programs don't start in HS. Most on this board assume their kid will be admitted to Walls. That's why it's always some reason why it didn't happen and the blame game starts. If you want buy in, go all the way.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It just seems like "bring the test back to Walls" is such a doable request that makes a ton of sense, would be easy for them to implement (because they used to) and seems to have near unanimous support here. Can we just push for that?
Push away. Beat your head against a wall if you wish. But Bowser won't bring the test back, or an external standardized test score (PARCC, PSAT 8/9) with an application either. The problem is that UMC-fueled political pushback can't amount to much without the demographics to build a critical mass of political support. This says to me that tests in DCPS HS magnet admissions won't be back as long as our current mayor is in office, or during the tenure of a crony who succeeds her either, if that's in the cards.
Bringing back the test makes large swaths of kids ineligible for the school. Keeping Walls open to the whole city where most schools aren't preparing kids to do well on any standardized test including math is a better political move than bringing back tests and restricting Walls to a handful of UMC schools.
It is a f***g magnet school with selective admissions.
UVA is a highly-regarded university with selective admissions; they still turn away high-scoring kids from Fairfax to make room for lower-scoring kids from rural counties, to maintain political support in the Virginia legislature. Same with UMD turning away high-scoring kids from Montgomery County.
Just because a school has selective admissions does not make it exempt from political reality.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It just seems like "bring the test back to Walls" is such a doable request that makes a ton of sense, would be easy for them to implement (because they used to) and seems to have near unanimous support here. Can we just push for that?
Push away. Beat your head against a wall if you wish. But Bowser won't bring the test back, or an external standardized test score (PARCC, PSAT 8/9) with an application either. The problem is that UMC-fueled political pushback can't amount to much without the demographics to build a critical mass of political support. This says to me that tests in DCPS HS magnet admissions won't be back as long as our current mayor is in office, or during the tenure of a crony who succeeds her either, if that's in the cards.
Bringing back the test makes large swaths of kids ineligible for the school. Keeping Walls open to the whole city where most schools aren't preparing kids to do well on any standardized test including math is a better political move than bringing back tests and restricting Walls to a handful of UMC schools.
It is a f***g magnet school with selective admissions.
UVA is a highly-regarded university with selective admissions; they still turn away high-scoring kids from Fairfax to make room for lower-scoring kids from rural counties, to maintain political support in the Virginia legislature. Same with UMD turning away high-scoring kids from Montgomery County.
Just because a school has selective admissions does not make it exempt from political reality.