Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DC needs to go all-lottery for HS
If you want to see well-off people make a run for the exits, that would be an excellent way to do it.
+100. Many middle and UMC families would leave the city. They can easily go to VA and MD and gat tracking. No one is going to wait around for the lottery and take a risk on high school. Real estate prices fall, city loses property taxes, etc...
Sad that racism is still this strong.
Do you have kids? Do you honestly believe that it's racist to not want to send your kids to a high school with a 3% PARCC pass rate for math? If so, you are delusional.
Systematic racism, implicit bias and straight up old fashioned bigotry are a huge problem, but calling parents with options racists for not signing on to an utterly failing school doesn't help anybody. I'm pretty sure that most parents at Anacostia would send their kids elsewhere if they had the option.
+1 million and BTW I posted that above and am a minority who grew up poor but did well in school thanks to tracking. Why doesn’t the poster who uses the race card ask any middle class AA family why they don’t send their kids to the failing schools. Oh wait but they are racist too.....
That’s the problem with people using the race card to justify the failing of students. You think putting them in a mixed high school classroom is going to do anything to improve their academic standing? News for you, by that time it is too late and they are too far behind. Look at the abysmal PARCC scores of DCPS high schools EOTP, single digits and kids that don’t even show up to school. Staff has to beg and bribe them to come to school to take the PARCC test. Oh but they will miraculously do better in classroom with high achieving kids. BS.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DC needs to go all-lottery for HS
If you want to see well-off people make a run for the exits, that would be an excellent way to do it.
+100. Many middle and UMC families would leave the city. They can easily go to VA and MD and gat tracking. No one is going to wait around for the lottery and take a risk on high school. Real estate prices fall, city loses property taxes, etc...
Sad that racism is still this strong.
Do you have kids? Do you honestly believe that it's racist to not want to send your kids to a high school with a 3% PARCC pass rate for math? If so, you are delusional.
Systematic racism, implicit bias and straight up old fashioned bigotry are a huge problem, but calling parents with options racists for not signing on to an utterly failing school doesn't help anybody. I'm pretty sure that most parents at Anacostia would send their kids elsewhere if they had the option.
Sad you don’t understand the existing research. For an educated crowd here, it’s pretty stupid. And yes, there is still systemic racism when schools are tied to real estate.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DC needs to go all-lottery for HS
If you want to see well-off people make a run for the exits, that would be an excellent way to do it.
+100. Many middle and UMC families would leave the city. They can easily go to VA and MD and gat tracking. No one is going to wait around for the lottery and take a risk on high school. Real estate prices fall, city loses property taxes, etc...
Sad that racism is still this strong.
Do you have kids? Do you honestly believe that it's racist to not want to send your kids to a high school with a 3% PARCC pass rate for math? If so, you are delusional.
Systematic racism, implicit bias and straight up old fashioned bigotry are a huge problem, but calling parents with options racists for not signing on to an utterly failing school doesn't help anybody. I'm pretty sure that most parents at Anacostia would send their kids elsewhere if they had the option.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DC needs to go all-lottery for HS
If you want to see well-off people make a run for the exits, that would be an excellent way to do it.
+100. Many middle and UMC families would leave the city. They can easily go to VA and MD and gat tracking. No one is going to wait around for the lottery and take a risk on high school. Real estate prices fall, city loses property taxes, etc...
Sad that racism is still this strong.
Do you have kids? Do you honestly believe that it's racist to not want to send your kids to a high school with a 3% PARCC pass rate for math? If so, you are delusional.
Systematic racism, implicit bias and straight up old fashioned bigotry are a huge problem, but calling parents with options racists for not signing on to an utterly failing school doesn't help anybody. I'm pretty sure that most parents at Anacostia would send their kids elsewhere if they had the option.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DC needs to go all-lottery for HS
If you want to see well-off people make a run for the exits, that would be an excellent way to do it.
+100. Many middle and UMC families would leave the city. They can easily go to VA and MD and gat tracking. No one is going to wait around for the lottery and take a risk on high school. Real estate prices fall, city loses property taxes, etc...
Sad that racism is still this strong.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wilson isn’t going to be redirected. It is status quo. You can go private if you don’t like it.
Thanks, and will you be paying the bill for everyone?
Anonymous wrote:Wilson isn’t going to be redirected. It is status quo. You can go private if you don’t like it.
Anonymous wrote:Not really, NYC runs around 10 big elite test-in high schools with a city-wide catchment area. These schools cream off the top 15% of students.
The great majority of UMC NYC families in public schools who can't afford private and whose children fail to test into one of the magnet programs bail for strong suburban schools.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DC needs to go all-lottery for HS
There is no successful model for that. SF does that and it isn’t working very well
NUC
NYC does it and has for years.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DC needs to go all-lottery for HS
If you want to see well-off people make a run for the exits, that would be an excellent way to do it.
+100. Many middle and UMC families would leave the city. They can easily go to VA and MD and gat tracking. No one is going to wait around for the lottery and take a risk on high school. Real estate prices fall, city loses property taxes, etc...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DC needs to go all-lottery for HS
There is no successful model for that. SF does that and it isn’t working very well
NUC
NYC does it and has for years.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DC needs to go all-lottery for HS
There is no successful model for that. SF does that and it isn’t working very well
This is about real estate balancing for all the new white people in NE and west of 16th st. Not about outcomes
This.
DC parents really just want to blow up the schools that work because if they can’t have good schools no one should. Even though they bought knowing they were on the bad side of town
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DC needs to go all-lottery for HS
There is no successful model for that. SF does that and it isn’t working very well
NUC