Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Weird way? Come on, when you attended a NYC magnet on your merits, it can be challenging to think in terms of DC charter schools like Latin Cooper offering a world-class middle or high school education. These schools are OK, often better than by-right DCPS alternatives, not more.
World-class? You are insane. No one is saying that. Why would you assume that a public charter will offer that? OP coming here to ask about Cooper isn't asking if it's world class, no one is that delusional.
Anonymous wrote:HS PARCC Scores aren't as telling as you suggest. There's nothing in it for the teens to score high, so many don't try too hard on the test. Some don't even turn up on testing days without penalty (a real issues at J-R). Many states now use PSAT or SAT to meet HS standardized test requirements, to incentivize the kids to score high on a test that might be useful to them individually. I'd like to see an apples-to-apples comparison between Latin Second Street and BASIS on AP scores and college acceptances.
Anonymous wrote:Disagree. Plenty of the Ward 6 parents we've known in our 20 years on CH are in fact that delusional. They routinely talk about Latin high school in the same category as top DC privates.
Anonymous wrote:Disagree. Plenty of the Ward 6 parents we've known in our 20 years on CH are in fact that delusional. They routinely talk about Latin high school in the same category as top DC privates.
Anonymous wrote:Weird way? Come on, when you attended a NYC magnet on your merits, it can be challenging to think in terms of DC charter schools like Latin Cooper offering a world-class middle or high school education. These schools are OK, often better than by-right DCPS alternatives, not more.
Anonymous wrote:Weird way? Come on, when you attended a NYC magnet on your merits, it can be challenging to think in terms of DC charter schools like Latin Cooper offering a world-class middle or high school education. These schools are OK, often better than by-right DCPS alternatives, not more.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There's a happy medium that we don't seem to have in DC public schools. My small-town middle and high school in a working-class community had decent electives, playing fields/sports, music, performing arts, academics (including extensive ability grouping in classes from 7th grade), diversity, etc. My spouse attended a NYC magnet middle/high school (Hunter). We left DC public schools for middle school because we weren't impressed with the next steps. We got into Latin Cooper last year and didn't take the spot.
It is very weird how many people who went to Hunter post on this forum. (I did too, so not criticizing at all. Just noticing.)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There's a happy medium that we don't seem to have in DC public schools. My small-town middle and high school in a working-class community had decent electives, playing fields/sports, music, performing arts, academics (including extensive ability grouping in classes from 7th grade), diversity, etc. My spouse attended a NYC magnet middle/high school (Hunter). We left DC public schools for middle school because we weren't impressed with the next steps. We got into Latin Cooper last year and didn't take the spot.
It is very weird how many people who went to Hunter post on this forum. (I did too, so not criticizing at all. Just noticing.)