Anonymous wrote:So now we know what the enrolment fraud involved.
Buh-bye.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DCPS starves the school of funds. They don’t have the extensive special Ed. resources most other schools have
Total excuse. From what I heard, he was overtly discriminating against kids with IEPs, which is illegal.
If you review the School Profile [let's assume it is directionally accurate] 0% of the students are special education.
This is the same % as Banneker has. However, Wilson has 10% of the student body as Special Education as a comparison point.
https://profiles.dcps.dc.gov/School+Without+Walls+High+School
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DCPS starves the school of funds. They don’t have the extensive special Ed. resources most other schools have
Total excuse. From what I heard, he was overtly discriminating against kids with IEPs, which is illegal.
Anonymous wrote:DCPS starves the school of funds. They don’t have the extensive special Ed. resources most other schools have
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DCPS starves the school of funds. They don’t have the extensive special Ed. resources most other schools have
Total excuse. From what I heard, he was overtly discriminating against kids with IEPs, which is illegal.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Jesus Christ you’ll need to chill on this.
Since Trogisch came on his goal has been to pack SWW with wealthy students. It is why they always ask students (and their families) where else they are looking. If it is a private, you basically have a slot. If it is Wilson, you probably have a slot. The rest are toss ups. After all, wealthier, better prepared students keep the metrics up.
Trogisch has been fighting against transparency and efforts to add diversity to the school for a bit under a decade. Apparently DCPS found a reason to finally fire him. We should be glad.
My DS who has learning disabilities is now a sophomore in college. The quote above is exactly what was happening to his cohort when it was their turn for high school admission. Privae school offer - come to Walls. Toss up between Wilson and Walls, we have space.
Trogisch told the audience at an open house we attended that IRP support services were limited and that applicants would not make the cut, saying that the students could not keep up. Yes, for him, it was always about the metrics.
OK. SWW is a school for a specific type of student. So what?
It's a public school, idiot. That's the 'what.'
It's a selective magnet school, not your neighborhood school. Idiot.
Anonymous wrote:DCPS starves the school of funds. They don’t have the extensive special Ed. resources most other schools have
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Jesus Christ you’ll need to chill on this.
Since Trogisch came on his goal has been to pack SWW with wealthy students. It is why they always ask students (and their families) where else they are looking. If it is a private, you basically have a slot. If it is Wilson, you probably have a slot. The rest are toss ups. After all, wealthier, better prepared students keep the metrics up.
Trogisch has been fighting against transparency and efforts to add diversity to the school for a bit under a decade. Apparently DCPS found a reason to finally fire him. We should be glad.
My DS who has learning disabilities is now a sophomore in college. The quote above is exactly what was happening to his cohort when it was their turn for high school admission. Privae school offer - come to Walls. Toss up between Wilson and Walls, we have space.
Trogisch told the audience at an open house we attended that IRP support services were limited and that applicants would not make the cut, saying that the students could not keep up. Yes, for him, it was always about the metrics.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Jesus Christ you’ll need to chill on this.
Since Trogisch came on his goal has been to pack SWW with wealthy students. It is why they always ask students (and their families) where else they are looking. If it is a private, you basically have a slot. If it is Wilson, you probably have a slot. The rest are toss ups. After all, wealthier, better prepared students keep the metrics up.
Trogisch has been fighting against transparency and efforts to add diversity to the school for a bit under a decade. Apparently DCPS found a reason to finally fire him. We should be glad.
My DS who has learning disabilities is now a sophomore in college. The quote above is exactly what was happening to his cohort when it was their turn for high school admission. Privae school offer - come to Walls. Toss up between Wilson and Walls, we have space.
Trogisch told the audience at an open house we attended that IRP support services were limited and that applicants would not make the cut, saying that the students could not keep up. Yes, for him, it was always about the metrics.
OK. SWW is a school for a specific type of student. So what?
It's a public school, idiot. That's the 'what.'
Anonymous wrote:
Walls was created as an alternative to Banneker. It gave room for a self-motivated high-achiever who didn't fit the Banneker mold.
I'm oversimplify but essentially that was it. They wanted a space of good learners who learned differently. Banneker was for the hardcore *traditional* learners.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Jesus Christ you’ll need to chill on this.
Since Trogisch came on his goal has been to pack SWW with wealthy students. It is why they always ask students (and their families) where else they are looking. If it is a private, you basically have a slot. If it is Wilson, you probably have a slot. The rest are toss ups. After all, wealthier, better prepared students keep the metrics up.
Trogisch has been fighting against transparency and efforts to add diversity to the school for a bit under a decade. Apparently DCPS found a reason to finally fire him. We should be glad.
My DS who has learning disabilities is now a sophomore in college. The quote above is exactly what was happening to his cohort when it was their turn for high school admission. Privae school offer - come to Walls. Toss up between Wilson and Walls, we have space.
Trogisch told the audience at an open house we attended that IRP support services were limited and that applicants would not make the cut, saying that the students could not keep up. Yes, for him, it was always about the metrics.
OK. SWW is a school for a specific type of student. So what?