Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So, you are arguing there should be no set asides?
Not if they are at the expense of in boundary students, meaning they are a reason to shrink the boundary AND there is no requirement they are actually used by at risk students. It has been presented as a lottery preference. Exactly how are kids that fit the parameters for at risk actually going to get to WOTP schools every day? I am happy to have at risk kids and OOB kids at the school, I am not supportive of reducing the boundary to make room for kids of parents that have actual other choices, meaning kids that are not at risk.
I agree with this. No child or family should be told they can't go to a school in their neighborhood because of some ideological bureaucrat's social engineering notion du jour.
+1000
Janney was built to serve the area East of Wisconsin, and it seems ridiculous to even consider removing the students living closest to the school. DCPS needs to think seriously about proximity for elementary schools. Kids living close to schools shouldn't be removed to satisfy a lame duck DC bureaurocrat.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So, you are arguing there should be no set asides?
Not if they are at the expense of in boundary students, meaning they are a reason to shrink the boundary AND there is no requirement they are actually used by at risk students. It has been presented as a lottery preference. Exactly how are kids that fit the parameters for at risk actually going to get to WOTP schools every day? I am happy to have at risk kids and OOB kids at the school, I am not supportive of reducing the boundary to make room for kids of parents that have actual other choices, meaning kids that are not at risk.
I agree with this. No child or family should be told they can't go to a school in their neighborhood because of some ideological bureaucrat's social engineering notion du jour.
+1000
Janney was built to serve the area East of Wisconsin, and it seems ridiculous to even consider removing the students living closest to the school. DCPS needs to think seriously about proximity for elementary schools. Kids living close to schools shouldn't be removed to satisfy a lame duck DC bureaurocrat.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So, you are arguing there should be no set asides?
Not if they are at the expense of in boundary students, meaning they are a reason to shrink the boundary AND there is no requirement they are actually used by at risk students. It has been presented as a lottery preference. Exactly how are kids that fit the parameters for at risk actually going to get to WOTP schools every day? I am happy to have at risk kids and OOB kids at the school, I am not supportive of reducing the boundary to make room for kids of parents that have actual other choices, meaning kids that are not at risk.
I agree with this. No child or family should be told they can't go to a school in their neighborhood because of some ideological bureaucrat's social engineering notion du jour.
+1000
Janney was built to serve the area East of Wisconsin, and it seems ridiculous to even consider removing the students living closest to the school. DCPS needs to think seriously about proximity for elementary schools. Kids living close to schools shouldn't be removed to satisfy a lame duck DC bureaurocrat.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So, you are arguing there should be no set asides?
Not if they are at the expense of in boundary students, meaning they are a reason to shrink the boundary AND there is no requirement they are actually used by at risk students. It has been presented as a lottery preference. Exactly how are kids that fit the parameters for at risk actually going to get to WOTP schools every day? I am happy to have at risk kids and OOB kids at the school, I am not supportive of reducing the boundary to make room for kids of parents that have actual other choices, meaning kids that are not at risk.
I agree with this. No child or family should be told they can't go to a school in their neighborhood because of some ideological bureaucrat's social engineering notion du jour.
+1000
Janney was built to serve the area East of Wisconsin, and it seems ridiculous to even consider removing the students living closest to the school. DCPS needs to think seriously about proximity for elementary schools. Kids living close to schools shouldn't be removed to satisfy a lame duck DC bureaurocrat.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:^^but isn't that true, in terms of geography and school overcrowding?
On some level, if they need to reduce the size of the Janney area, either for over-crowding or to have room for the OOB quota, then it's logical to change the boundaries to the east and the south. The only way to re-zone homes to the north and west of Janney is to put them in Montgomery County.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So, you are arguing there should be no set asides?
Not if they are at the expense of in boundary students, meaning they are a reason to shrink the boundary AND there is no requirement they are actually used by at risk students. It has been presented as a lottery preference. Exactly how are kids that fit the parameters for at risk actually going to get to WOTP schools every day? I am happy to have at risk kids and OOB kids at the school, I am not supportive of reducing the boundary to make room for kids of parents that have actual other choices, meaning kids that are not at risk.
I agree with this. No child or family should be told they can't go to a school in their neighborhood because of some ideological bureaucrat's social engineering notion du jour.
Anonymous wrote:^^but isn't that true, in terms of geography and school overcrowding?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So, you are arguing there should be no set asides?
Not if they are at the expense of in boundary students, meaning they are a reason to shrink the boundary AND there is no requirement they are actually used by at risk students. It has been presented as a lottery preference. Exactly how are kids that fit the parameters for at risk actually going to get to WOTP schools every day? I am happy to have at risk kids and OOB kids at the school, I am not supportive of reducing the boundary to make room for kids of parents that have actual other choices, meaning kids that are not at risk.
Anonymous wrote:Agree with previous posters: there are almost zero stay-at-home moms in the younger (PK, K) grades at Janney.
Anonymous wrote:So, you are arguing there should be no set asides?
Anonymous wrote:^^but isn't that true, in terms of geography and school overcrowding?