Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:With more IB kids going to Hardy from traditionally low feeders, it should be possible to flip Hardy in several years to a majority IB middle school. That in turn will have a cascading effect as more IB prospective parents get comfortable with the academic preparation of the student body and increasing academic performance of the school.
Then it's bye bye uniforms.
There it is. We missed you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Don't many Mann and Key students go to private after 4th grade? If so, 50% of the 5th-grade class really isn't the relevant number. You should be looking at % of the 3rd and 4th grade classes.
Mann's fifth-grade class last year was 19 students. This year: 42 students. 100% of third- and fourth-graders returned. Next year's fifth-grade class is supposed to be 55 kids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:With more IB kids going to Hardy from traditionally low feeders, it should be possible to flip Hardy in several years to a majority IB middle school. That in turn will have a cascading effect as more IB prospective parents get comfortable with the academic preparation of the student body and increasing academic performance of the school.
Then it's bye bye uniforms.
Anonymous wrote:With more IB kids going to Hardy from traditionally low feeders, it should be possible to flip Hardy in several years to a majority IB middle school. That in turn will have a cascading effect as more IB prospective parents get comfortable with the academic preparation of the student body and increasing academic performance of the school.
Anonymous wrote:Don't many Mann and Key students go to private after 4th grade? If so, 50% of the 5th-grade class really isn't the relevant number. You should be looking at % of the 3rd and 4th grade classes.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Frankly, and no offense, but Key is not really relevant to the improvement at Hardy. Changes at Hardy will be led by Stoddert and Mann. None of the Mann parents are revising their opinions based upon whether Key families find Hardy acceptable. (That sounds harsh; I don't mean it to be harsh.)
I don't know what's happening at Stoddert, but familiarity with Pride should mitigate some of the inevitable bumps in the road. I assume -- repeat, assume -- takeup at Hardy from Stoddert will continue rising, perhaps precipitously.
I had long thought that Stoddert would have to do it alone. Mann is devoting a lot of resources to making Hardy more acceptable to in-boundary families. It's not clear that Mann will be one of the leaders of the movement to Hardy.
Agreed that Stoddert will be the bellwether. Unpersuaded that Key is any more or less influential than Mann in terms of convincing larger cohorts of high SES IB families to attend. I don't think that either the Mann community or the Key community is collectively holding its breath, waiting to see what the other will do. What will get more Mann families going to Hardy is . . . more Mann families going to Hardy. And what will get more Key families going to Hardy is, likewise, more Key families going to Hardy. Hopefully, if enough Stoddert families choose Hardy, both the Mann and Key communities will be inspired to give it a try.
Signed, Key mom
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Frankly, and no offense, but Key is not really relevant to the improvement at Hardy. Changes at Hardy will be led by Stoddert and Mann. None of the Mann parents are revising their opinions based upon whether Key families find Hardy acceptable. (That sounds harsh; I don't mean it to be harsh.)
I don't know what's happening at Stoddert, but familiarity with Pride should mitigate some of the inevitable bumps in the road. I assume -- repeat, assume -- takeup at Hardy from Stoddert will continue rising, perhaps precipitously.
I had long thought that Stoddert would have to do it alone. Mann is devoting a lot of resources to making Hardy more acceptable to in-boundary families. It's not clear that Mann will be one of the leaders of the movement to Hardy.
Agreed that Stoddert will be the bellwether. Unpersuaded that Key is any more or less influential than Mann in terms of convincing larger cohorts of high SES IB families to attend. I don't think that either the Mann community or the Key community is collectively holding its breath, waiting to see what the other will do. What will get more Mann families going to Hardy is . . . more Mann families going to Hardy. And what will get more Key families going to Hardy is, likewise, more Key families going to Hardy. Hopefully, if enough Stoddert families choose Hardy, both the Mann and Key communities will be inspired to give it a try.
Signed, Key mom
Anonymous wrote:Frankly, and no offense, but Key is not really relevant to the improvement at Hardy. Changes at Hardy will be led by Stoddert and Mann. None of the Mann parents are revising their opinions based upon whether Key families find Hardy acceptable. (That sounds harsh; I don't mean it to be harsh.)
I don't know what's happening at Stoddert, but familiarity with Pride should mitigate some of the inevitable bumps in the road. I assume -- repeat, assume -- takeup at Hardy from Stoddert will continue rising, perhaps precipitously.
I had long thought that Stoddert would have to do it alone. Mann is devoting a lot of resources to making Hardy more acceptable to in-boundary families. It's not clear that Mann will be one of the leaders of the movement to Hardy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I literally just got off he phone with a Mann parent who was talking about where to send her child to private after Mann. I asked if Hardy was an option and she said everyone at Mann knows Hardy is not an option. Very different opinion. Where do the Mann kids go?
Umm, no. Many other (high-income) Mann parents are considering Hardy strongly. We talk about it.
Whoever said "trolls gotta troll" hit the nail on the head.
Signed,
Mann parent
Likely the admissions and PR staffs from pricey private middle schools that are likely to lose full-priced tuition payments when some families decide to stay public through middle.
I'll bet that Hardy keeps the admissions officers at St Albans and Sidwell up at night.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I literally just got off he phone with a Mann parent who was talking about where to send her child to private after Mann. I asked if Hardy was an option and she said everyone at Mann knows Hardy is not an option. Very different opinion. Where do the Mann kids go?
Umm, no. Many other (high-income) Mann parents are considering Hardy strongly. We talk about it.
Whoever said "trolls gotta troll" hit the nail on the head.
Signed,
Mann parent
Likely the admissions and PR staffs from pricey private middle schools that are likely to lose full-priced tuition payments when some families decide to stay public through middle.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I literally just got off he phone with a Mann parent who was talking about where to send her child to private after Mann. I asked if Hardy was an option and she said everyone at Mann knows Hardy is not an option. Very different opinion. Where do the Mann kids go?
Umm, no. Many other (high-income) Mann parents are considering Hardy strongly. We talk about it.
Whoever said "trolls gotta troll" hit the nail on the head.
Signed,
Mann parent