Anonymous wrote:Who cares if they're years away as long as the ball is rolling? When the baseball stadium opened, the Navy Yard as we know it was years away. Time moves neighborhoods on, and hope springs eternal when a neighborhood has a high-performing, by-right school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It makes sense for Van Ness Elementary School to have a boundary where South Capitol Street is the boundary to the West, the SE/SW Freeway is the boundary to the north, and the Anacostia River is the boundary to the South and East. There are hardly any kids from the Capitol Riverfront area attending Amidon-Bowen, so it won't hurt the population at Amidon-Bowen at all by giving Van Ness its own boundary. Hopefully this sentiment is being echoed to the DCPS.
I love it when I'm right!
Anonymous wrote:It makes sense for Van Ness Elementary School to have a boundary where South Capitol Street is the boundary to the West, the SE/SW Freeway is the boundary to the north, and the Anacostia River is the boundary to the South and East. There are hardly any kids from the Capitol Riverfront area attending Amidon-Bowen, so it won't hurt the population at Amidon-Bowen at all by giving Van Ness its own boundary. Hopefully this sentiment is being echoed to the DCPS.
Anonymous wrote:Does anyone remember when some in the Amidon community complained about the merger with Bowen and the influx of ill-behaved kids?
Anonymous wrote:pre K is awesome because it becomes the "gateway" for a lot of high SES parents into an elem school who otherwise would never consider it by K or 1st grade. Everyone is willing to overlook some issues if it means they don't have to pay for another year of child care so they enroll in pre K, realize maybe the school is actually ok, meet other like minded parents. The parents then "band together" and start organizing and stick together for as many years as possible. I see this in a bunch of my friends at schools on the cusp.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How would sending low income AA kids from Amidon to Van Ness serve them better? People keep posting that somehow that will raise their test scores.
If the FARMs rate is below 35% and ideally below 20%, studies have shown the low-income kids will do better. http://www.joannejacobs.com/2010/10/poor-learn-more-in-low-poverty-schools/
The trick is figuring out how to take 2 neighborhoods (SW and Near SE) where there are a lot of kids in poverty and come out with a school that is at least 2/3 not poor. It will take lots of things:
* enrollment by a very high percentage of middle/upper class families in the area
* creating programs that attract richer families from out of bounds (of course those same programs attract *all* families)
* inclusive boundaries--not putting all the poor kids in Amidon and all the rich ones at Van Ness
* building more market-rate housing in SW and Near SE that is attractive to families. Townhouses or 2 and 3 bedroom apartments. Due to inclusionary zoning, there will also be an affordable component to anything that's built. Eventually, if public housing is redeveloped with a 2:1 or 3:1 ratio of market rate to affordable, that would make a difference too. Greater density on the sites and building housing on some of the city-owned sites in the area would allow that to happen without displacement or loss of affordability. But that would take buyin from the mayor, office of planning, DCHA, and lots of others.
Plus, if the VNPG is right, all their teachers will be vetted by the PTA and are guaranteed to be amazing. That can't hurt.
Anonymous wrote: By the way, contrary to what you may believe, there are not "a lot" of poor kids living in Near SE (Navy Yard). Capper/Carrollsburg has been replaced by Capitol Quarter and nearby high-end condos and apartments, which are out of reach of the working poor and far from optimal for most UMC families with school-aged children. What happens to Greenleaf, Syphax and James Creek now that the HOPE VI program is dead-in-the-water holds the key to the future of Amidon and Jefferson, particularly when the DME cuts the feed to Wilson. Call me pessimistic, but the days when there will be enough high-SES families south of the Eisenhower Freeway to compromise two-thirds of the student bodies at Amidon and Van Ness (about 500 students) are still years away.