Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They are going to have to limit PreK to low income families. Universal PreK is great but why does a family making $150k a year need it? They will need to pay for daycare or private PreK.
Free Park has been the biggest driver to get UMC families into DCPS. Not shiny buildings or empty promises. FREE preschool. The families get into the school
And realize it’s not that bad and slowly more families have stayed. And that’s why test scores are going up.
UMC can easily afford PreK. Why do you think that draws them?
Our HHI was about $275K when our daughter was in a $20K daycare. Heck yeah we signed up for our IB to save on PK3! And we ended up loving the school. Free PK3 is a big draw for people like us that do okay but aren't rich (I think it would be less of a draw for folks above $400K).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They are going to have to limit PreK to low income families. Universal PreK is great but why does a family making $150k a year need it? They will need to pay for daycare or private PreK.
Free Park has been the biggest driver to get UMC families into DCPS. Not shiny buildings or empty promises. FREE preschool. The families get into the school
And realize it’s not that bad and slowly more families have stayed. And that’s why test scores are going up.
UMC can easily afford PreK. Why do you think that draws them?
If you're saving up for $40K+ private school for middle and high school or $70K+ college the $20K+ you save on pre-K is significant.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:These are OP numbers. Not large WOTP growth. https://planning.dc.gov/sites/default/files/dc/sites/op/publication/attachments/Neighborhood%20Cluster%20Age%200-4.pdf
https://planning.dc.gov/sites/default/files/dc/sites/op/publication/attachments/Neighborhood%20Cluster%20Age%200-17.pdf
The first chart in particular shows elementary age growth and yes while there is 0-17 growth WOTP in the second the highest area around Lafayette has 1/3 the growth of Petworth.
If you want to build to match WOTP growth numbers like this build to that limit. Do not making fleeing west an option for Petworth or Ward 1. Pull off the band aid. No additional floor on Deal if that is a trade off for a new elementary school between Spring Road and Military Road. Fill up Ward1 and 4 schools and have NONE of their students going to Hearst, Deal, Wilson.
This is ugly politics but it’s how you get the mix you want in more schools, period.
We’ll know that DC is planning ahead for Ward 1 when they build a middle school for Shaw.
Unless their plan to deal with Shaw growth is just to chase all the Shaw kids out of the system by 3rd grade.
In fact, it does seem like that is the current plan.
I agree that the current plan seems to be to force people to leave. I don’t understand that as a matter of urban planning.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They are going to have to limit PreK to low income families. Universal PreK is great but why does a family making $150k a year need it? They will need to pay for daycare or private PreK.
Free Park has been the biggest driver to get UMC families into DCPS. Not shiny buildings or empty promises. FREE preschool. The families get into the school
And realize it’s not that bad and slowly more families have stayed. And that’s why test scores are going up.
UMC can easily afford PreK. Why do you think that draws them?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They are going to have to limit PreK to low income families. Universal PreK is great but why does a family making $150k a year need it? They will need to pay for daycare or private PreK.
Free Park has been the biggest driver to get UMC families into DCPS. Not shiny buildings or empty promises. FREE preschool. The families get into the school
And realize it’s not that bad and slowly more families have stayed. And that’s why test scores are going up.
UMC can easily afford PreK. Why do you think that draws them?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They are going to have to limit PreK to low income families. Universal PreK is great but why does a family making $150k a year need it? They will need to pay for daycare or private PreK.
Free Park has been the biggest driver to get UMC families into DCPS. Not shiny buildings or empty promises. FREE preschool. The families get into the school
And realize it’s not that bad and slowly more families have stayed. And that’s why test scores are going up.
Anonymous wrote:They are going to have to limit PreK to low income families. Universal PreK is great but why does a family making $150k a year need it? They will need to pay for daycare or private PreK.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:These are OP numbers. Not large WOTP growth. https://planning.dc.gov/sites/default/files/dc/sites/op/publication/attachments/Neighborhood%20Cluster%20Age%200-4.pdf
https://planning.dc.gov/sites/default/files/dc/sites/op/publication/attachments/Neighborhood%20Cluster%20Age%200-17.pdf
The first chart in particular shows elementary age growth and yes while there is 0-17 growth WOTP in the second the highest area around Lafayette has 1/3 the growth of Petworth.
If you want to build to match WOTP growth numbers like this build to that limit. Do not making fleeing west an option for Petworth or Ward 1. Pull off the band aid. No additional floor on Deal if that is a trade off for a new elementary school between Spring Road and Military Road. Fill up Ward1 and 4 schools and have NONE of their students going to Hearst, Deal, Wilson.
This is ugly politics but it’s how you get the mix you want in more schools, period.
We’ll know that DC is planning ahead for Ward 1 when they build a middle school for Shaw.
Unless their plan to deal with Shaw growth is just to chase all the Shaw kids out of the system by 3rd grade.
In fact, it does seem like that is the current plan.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Two things: building where there is little growth WORP is fundamentally a failure.
“All-lottery” will be fought by those happy with neighborhood schools.
Basically I think ‘all lottery’ fails because Ward 3 organizes and shows up in huge numbers everywhere during boundary reviews. I hate it but it’s true.
I personally will fight expanding Ward 3 schools for out of boundary enrollment
Best solution effectively will be force everyone to go to their own neighborhood schools. It will partially integrate Wards one and four.
Why are you saying there is little growth WOTP? Office of Planning projections show thousands of new students living WOTP.
Where, exactly? Ward 3 is pretty built out, so unless they assume that developers are going to start bulldozing single family neighborhoods for dense and tall mixed use (a GGW fantasy, I’m sure), it’s not going to happen.
Anonymous wrote:This comes up all the time here, but there’s no way a citywide lottery would ever happen.
The voters/taxpayers that would support it might do so for a few years, but then their kids get into a school they’re ok with or they move away and the issue fades. The “muh property values” set will be passionate about this issue forever.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:These are OP numbers. Not large WOTP growth. https://planning.dc.gov/sites/default/files/dc/sites/op/publication/attachments/Neighborhood%20Cluster%20Age%200-4.pdf
https://planning.dc.gov/sites/default/files/dc/sites/op/publication/attachments/Neighborhood%20Cluster%20Age%200-17.pdf
The first chart in particular shows elementary age growth and yes while there is 0-17 growth WOTP in the second the highest area around Lafayette has 1/3 the growth of Petworth.
If you want to build to match WOTP growth numbers like this build to that limit. Do not making fleeing west an option for Petworth or Ward 1. Pull off the band aid. No additional floor on Deal if that is a trade off for a new elementary school between Spring Road and Military Road. Fill up Ward1 and 4 schools and have NONE of their students going to Hearst, Deal, Wilson.
This is ugly politics but it’s how you get the mix you want in more schools, period.
We’ll know that DC is planning ahead for Ward 1 when they build a middle school for Shaw.
Unless their plan to deal with Shaw growth is just to chase all the Shaw kids out of the system by 3rd grade.
In fact, it does seem like that is the current plan.
Anonymous wrote:These are OP numbers. Not large WOTP growth. https://planning.dc.gov/sites/default/files/dc/sites/op/publication/attachments/Neighborhood%20Cluster%20Age%200-4.pdf
https://planning.dc.gov/sites/default/files/dc/sites/op/publication/attachments/Neighborhood%20Cluster%20Age%200-17.pdf
The first chart in particular shows elementary age growth and yes while there is 0-17 growth WOTP in the second the highest area around Lafayette has 1/3 the growth of Petworth.
If you want to build to match WOTP growth numbers like this build to that limit. Do not making fleeing west an option for Petworth or Ward 1. Pull off the band aid. No additional floor on Deal if that is a trade off for a new elementary school between Spring Road and Military Road. Fill up Ward1 and 4 schools and have NONE of their students going to Hearst, Deal, Wilson.
This is ugly politics but it’s how you get the mix you want in more schools, period.