Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The bus ride is crazy .I went to Mac Arthur yesterday and girls waiting for the bus are there by themselves; around men sitting to close to them and smoking weed . Parents you have to do something and call the city to put straight buses from the schools to metro station .The cool and darks is coming . don't put your kids in risk. Proposal for new buses never happened đ
What on earth are you talking about?!! A large group of kids, boys and girls, take the bus from Macarthur at dismissal. Not everyone who takes the bus is going to the metro station so a bus straight to the metro makes no sense. Also DC Metro increased the frequency/number of buses at dismissal to accommodate the school and in turn, Macarthur has staggered dismissal times to coincide with the bus arrival. So not sure how much more can be done. Metro and the school have worked well together to address the transportation issue.
I donât get why everyone seems so eager to bash this school
and look for the worst to see it fail. Makes no sense.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Macarthur parent here: The fight happened at Dupont Circle, which has historically been the location of fights among students/involving students from various DCPS high schoolers. In this particular instance, a kid/group of kids from Macarthur jumped another kid at Dupont Circle. The following day, supposedly the parents of the victim went to the Dupont Circle stop and retaliated against the kid/kids who were the prior daysâ perpetrators. Of course this was foul all around. The police are investigating.
If you want to send your child to a school that does not have parents who do such things at a bus stop three miles away from the school then definitely this isnât the school for you (and JR prob isnât either). I have been impressed (and I say impressed because yes, I did harbor stereotypes) by how much these so called low SES parents care about their kids and their kidsâ education and that comes across IN THE SCHOOL. Remember, in a great many instances kids who donât live in the MacArthur boundary have adults in their lives who MADE THE CHOICE to send their kids to Hardy or to enter the lottery to go to Macarthur and sacrifice by having their kids endure sometimes 2 hour commutes to get a better education than their in-boundary school. I want to be in a school like that.
The administration canât control whatâs happening at a bus stop three miles away but even so are working hard to address the issues at Dupont Circle which are in fact out of their control.
The teachers at Macarthur are fantastic and dedicated. The administration is professional and extremely adept at managing constituents with various concernsâfrom the 9th grader who may have an ankle monitor to the parent wondering about which Ivy will be visiting the school in the fall, to the neighborhood rep worrying about the schoolâs fence encroaching on neighborsâ lawns. Our kid is thriving and I encourage others to visit in person or contact parents at the school.
PS a kid left Mac the first week of school to go back to JR and returned a week later, regretting the decision. That spoke volumes.
A student canât just switch from MacArthur to JR and then back to MacArthur. This is because the student can only be in-bounds for one of these schools and mustâve gotten into one via the lottery.
Unless MacArthur was unable to fill this studentâs seat when they left, which says a lotâŚI donât know how this couldâve happened. Please explain.
Untrue. This is the last year that kids from Hardy have a choice. They are in bounds for both. Next year this will not be the case, but it absolutely is this year
Anonymous wrote:The bus ride is crazy .I went to Mac Arthur yesterday and girls waiting for the bus are there by themselves; around men sitting to close to them and smoking weed . Parents you have to do something and call the city to put straight buses from the schools to metro station .The cool and darks is coming . don't put your kids in risk. Proposal for new buses never happened đ
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:https://www.instagram.com/p/C_27ewVR9_W/?igsh=MWs5NmFtYnYwNGMwaQ==
Wowâthat is disgraceful. Shame on posters for saying this was made up.
Umm, thatâs not MacArthur. You know this right?
Yes. It is. You obviously donât have a child at the school. Mine doesnât even attend MacArthur and we heard about it.
No, it's not. MacArthur High School is set back from MacArthur Boulevard, where the bus stop is. There are apartment buildings and a parking lot between the boulevard/bus stop and the school. This fight may have happened at a bus stop outside of some school, but the school is not MacArthur.[/quote
The kids are MacArthur students. The parents are MacArthur parent. The bus drove off from the stop away from the school - the parents were waiting at the next stop. So you are right that those buildings are not MacArthur - but those involved are all from the MacArthur community.
Since you are obviously not a part of the community and have no idea what youâre talking about, you should stop commenting.
I live in the neighborhood. I pass this school every day. My children are in boundary and may attend. But sure, I'm not "a part of the community" because I don't recognize a bunch of blurry strangers fighting at a bus stop that isn't in my neighborhood. Pull the other one.
Exactly. But mostly youâre not a part of the community because you have no idea whatâs happening in the community. Ever heard the saying âyouâre not affiliated if you have to askâ. Remember that before commenting in the future. And again, you should stop commenting on the community since youâre ignorant.
This post is so deeply embarrassing, given that itâs trying to connect events in DuPont Circle to MacArthur.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Macarthur parent here: The fight happened at Dupont Circle, which has historically been the location of fights among students/involving students from various DCPS high schoolers. In this particular instance, a kid/group of kids from Macarthur jumped another kid at Dupont Circle. The following day, supposedly the parents of the victim went to the Dupont Circle stop and retaliated against the kid/kids who were the prior daysâ perpetrators. Of course this was foul all around. The police are investigating.
If you want to send your child to a school that does not have parents who do such things at a bus stop three miles away from the school then definitely this isnât the school for you (and JR prob isnât either). I have been impressed (and I say impressed because yes, I did harbor stereotypes) by how much these so called low SES parents care about their kids and their kidsâ education and that comes across IN THE SCHOOL. Remember, in a great many instances kids who donât live in the MacArthur boundary have adults in their lives who MADE THE CHOICE to send their kids to Hardy or to enter the lottery to go to Macarthur and sacrifice by having their kids endure sometimes 2 hour commutes to get a better education than their in-boundary school. I want to be in a school like that.
The administration canât control whatâs happening at a bus stop three miles away but even so are working hard to address the issues at Dupont Circle which are in fact out of their control.
The teachers at Macarthur are fantastic and dedicated. The administration is professional and extremely adept at managing constituents with various concernsâfrom the 9th grader who may have an ankle monitor to the parent wondering about which Ivy will be visiting the school in the fall, to the neighborhood rep worrying about the schoolâs fence encroaching on neighborsâ lawns. Our kid is thriving and I encourage others to visit in person or contact parents at the school.
PS a kid left Mac the first week of school to go back to JR and returned a week later, regretting the decision. That spoke volumes.
A student canât just switch from MacArthur to JR and then back to MacArthur. This is because the student can only be in-bounds for one of these schools and mustâve gotten into one via the lottery.
Unless MacArthur was unable to fill this studentâs seat when they left, which says a lotâŚI donât know how this couldâve happened. Please explain.
Untrue. This is the last year that kids from Hardy have a choice. They are in bounds for both. Next year this will not be the case, but it absolutely is this year
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Macarthur parent here: The fight happened at Dupont Circle, which has historically been the location of fights among students/involving students from various DCPS high schoolers. In this particular instance, a kid/group of kids from Macarthur jumped another kid at Dupont Circle. The following day, supposedly the parents of the victim went to the Dupont Circle stop and retaliated against the kid/kids who were the prior daysâ perpetrators. Of course this was foul all around. The police are investigating.
If you want to send your child to a school that does not have parents who do such things at a bus stop three miles away from the school then definitely this isnât the school for you (and JR prob isnât either). I have been impressed (and I say impressed because yes, I did harbor stereotypes) by how much these so called low SES parents care about their kids and their kidsâ education and that comes across IN THE SCHOOL. Remember, in a great many instances kids who donât live in the MacArthur boundary have adults in their lives who MADE THE CHOICE to send their kids to Hardy or to enter the lottery to go to Macarthur and sacrifice by having their kids endure sometimes 2 hour commutes to get a better education than their in-boundary school. I want to be in a school like that.
The administration canât control whatâs happening at a bus stop three miles away but even so are working hard to address the issues at Dupont Circle which are in fact out of their control.
The teachers at Macarthur are fantastic and dedicated. The administration is professional and extremely adept at managing constituents with various concernsâfrom the 9th grader who may have an ankle monitor to the parent wondering about which Ivy will be visiting the school in the fall, to the neighborhood rep worrying about the schoolâs fence encroaching on neighborsâ lawns. Our kid is thriving and I encourage others to visit in person or contact parents at the school.
PS a kid left Mac the first week of school to go back to JR and returned a week later, regretting the decision. That spoke volumes.
A student canât just switch from MacArthur to JR and then back to MacArthur. This is because the student can only be in-bounds for one of these schools and mustâve gotten into one via the lottery.
Unless MacArthur was unable to fill this studentâs seat when they left, which says a lotâŚI donât know how this couldâve happened. Please explain.