Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Again, these conversations about scores etc. are silly. DCI is much larger, so yes, there will be a larger cohort of kids of any type (high performing, disruptive, low performing, etc.)
The schools are different. If you think Latin would benefit your kid and they are already fluent in Spanish, Latin is great. If your kid wants to keep taking social studies in Spanish, DCI is great.
If your kid likes class discussion and relationships with staff, Latin is great. If your kid thrives in a lecture format and is good at getting outside help when they need it, DCI is great.
Choose for your kid. Not for someone on the internet that needs to justify the choices they've made.
I’m the PP above responding to a poster saying that they are not sure DCI has more of a high performing peer group. DCI does and the data proves it. My kid is not at DCI and I have no need to justify anything. But if you don’t like like objective data then that’s you but plenty of people do then believing some BS comment on an anonymous board.
The discussion was what exactly does Latin offer that is better then DCI?
How do you know DCI doesn’t have class discussions and relationships with staff when a previous poster pointed out that their kids class sizes are not larger then Latins?
How do you know that DCI classes are run on lecture format and kids get outside help? You don’t think teachers have classroom discussions or available to help students who need it in class or after class?
Making statements without actual experiences or data doesn’t give you much credibility. Scores and data may be “silly” to you but to many they are not and the most reliable, objective measure.
When people say “more” of a high performing cohort, they may mean percentage wise not just raw numbers. I’d rather my kid be at a school with 70% of kids on grade level than one with 50% of kids on grade level all else being equal; I certainly wouldn’t describe the latter as having a more high performing cohort just because it’s bigger.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Again, these conversations about scores etc. are silly. DCI is much larger, so yes, there will be a larger cohort of kids of any type (high performing, disruptive, low performing, etc.)
The schools are different. If you think Latin would benefit your kid and they are already fluent in Spanish, Latin is great. If your kid wants to keep taking social studies in Spanish, DCI is great.
If your kid likes class discussion and relationships with staff, Latin is great. If your kid thrives in a lecture format and is good at getting outside help when they need it, DCI is great.
Choose for your kid. Not for someone on the internet that needs to justify the choices they've made.
I’m the PP above responding to a poster saying that they are not sure DCI has more of a high performing peer group. DCI does and the data proves it. My kid is not at DCI and I have no need to justify anything. But if you don’t like like objective data then that’s you but plenty of people do then believing some BS comment on an anonymous board.
The discussion was what exactly does Latin offer that is better then DCI?
How do you know DCI doesn’t have class discussions and relationships with staff when a previous poster pointed out that their kids class sizes are not larger then Latins?
How do you know that DCI classes are run on lecture format and kids get outside help? You don’t think teachers have classroom discussions or available to help students who need it in class or after class?
Making statements without actual experiences or data doesn’t give you much credibility. Scores and data may be “silly” to you but to many they are not and the most reliable, objective measure.
When people say “more” of a high performing cohort, they may mean percentage wise not just raw numbers. I’d rather my kid be at a school with 70% of kids on grade level than one with 50% of kids on grade level all else being equal; I certainly wouldn’t describe the latter as having a more high performing cohort just because it’s bigger.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Again, these conversations about scores etc. are silly. DCI is much larger, so yes, there will be a larger cohort of kids of any type (high performing, disruptive, low performing, etc.)
The schools are different. If you think Latin would benefit your kid and they are already fluent in Spanish, Latin is great. If your kid wants to keep taking social studies in Spanish, DCI is great.
If your kid likes class discussion and relationships with staff, Latin is great. If your kid thrives in a lecture format and is good at getting outside help when they need it, DCI is great.
Choose for your kid. Not for someone on the internet that needs to justify the choices they've made.
I’m the PP above responding to a poster saying that they are not sure DCI has more of a high performing peer group. DCI does and the data proves it. My kid is not at DCI and I have no need to justify anything. But if you don’t like like objective data then that’s you but plenty of people do then believing some BS comment on an anonymous board.
The discussion was what exactly does Latin offer that is better then DCI?
How do you know DCI doesn’t have class discussions and relationships with staff when a previous poster pointed out that their kids class sizes are not larger then Latins?
How do you know that DCI classes are run on lecture format and kids get outside help? You don’t think teachers have classroom discussions or available to help students who need it in class or after class?
Making statements without actual experiences or data doesn’t give you much credibility. Scores and data may be “silly” to you but to many they are not and the most reliable, objective measure.
Anonymous wrote:Again, these conversations about scores etc. are silly. DCI is much larger, so yes, there will be a larger cohort of kids of any type (high performing, disruptive, low performing, etc.)
The schools are different. If you think Latin would benefit your kid and they are already fluent in Spanish, Latin is great. If your kid wants to keep taking social studies in Spanish, DCI is great.
If your kid likes class discussion and relationships with staff, Latin is great. If your kid thrives in a lecture format and is good at getting outside help when they need it, DCI is great.
Choose for your kid. Not for someone on the internet that needs to justify the choices they've made.
Anonymous wrote:Not sure DCI has a "more high performing cohort." I Didn't think DCI college acceptances were that great and their IB scores are mediocre.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I d not see much advantage at all to Cooper over DCI.
DCI has
- More high performing cohort
- More courses and curriculum offerings
- More tracking options with languages and courses offered in languages and math
- Way better facilities, night and day
- Way more sports, clubs, extracurriculars
- More diverse
What exactly does Copper offer that is better than DCI exactly? Maybe a little less tech, but it’s not like they are tech free.
We left a DCI feeder for 2nd street, and the draw for us were the smaller class sizes. All of my kid's classes at 2nd St. have had 18 or 19 kids in them. Everything I have heard from friends at DCI are that the classes have 24-28 kids in them. There are plenty of kids for whom that might not really matter, but it makes a big difference for my kid. We are sad to miss out on some of the things DCI has to offer, but it has absolutely been the right choice for us to move to Latin.
Anonymous wrote:I d not see much advantage at all to Cooper over DCI.
DCI has
- More high performing cohort
- More courses and curriculum offerings
- More tracking options with languages and courses offered in languages and math
- Way better facilities, night and day
- Way more sports, clubs, extracurriculars
- More diverse
What exactly does Copper offer that is better than DCI exactly? Maybe a little less tech, but it’s not like they are tech free.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My child likes language and is dong well. Math has been a challenge and ELA good. Cooper is much closer to us and we are attracted to the small class size at Cooper but since this all came as a big surprise (moving up the WL) so fast we do t know that much about the school. We are a little concerned about the size of DCI and that it would like depending on how to place your child might only have one language class. Of course the guarantee of getting into MS/HS is attractive.
With this update, I’d definitely take Cooper. I wouldn’t risk a bad lottery draw with uncertain preference odds when you have a closer, smaller, and likely to be academically stronger option right now.
This. OP just doesn't seem very enthused about DCI. And, if it isn't Spanish, I wouldn't totally rule out non-feeder DCI for 6th.
https://public.tableau.com/app/profile/aaron2446/viz/MSDCSeatsandWaitlistOfferData_draft/MSDCPublicDisplay
I have a kid at Yu Ying and parents seem really nervous about there being enough seats for Chinese. Is that a valid concern? I would dismiss it but it’s a lot of parents.
I think it's fine for everyone older than preschool and K this year, and not enough seats for kids in preschool and K this year.
I will point out that DCI has made a lot of Chinese non-feeder offers for 6th.
I checked and I think DCI’s total number of Chinese offers (70ish across YY- 48 this year, 52 last year- and the lottery- 8 on match day and 31 by June) would cover all of YY’s pre-k 3 offers the last two years (71). The question is if only 17 odd kids are going from YY to DCI, or whatever else is going on with that.
You can use the OSSE enrollment spreadsheets to more accurately determine class size.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My child likes language and is dong well. Math has been a challenge and ELA good. Cooper is much closer to us and we are attracted to the small class size at Cooper but since this all came as a big surprise (moving up the WL) so fast we do t know that much about the school. We are a little concerned about the size of DCI and that it would like depending on how to place your child might only have one language class. Of course the guarantee of getting into MS/HS is attractive.
With this update, I’d definitely take Cooper. I wouldn’t risk a bad lottery draw with uncertain preference odds when you have a closer, smaller, and likely to be academically stronger option right now.
This. OP just doesn't seem very enthused about DCI. And, if it isn't Spanish, I wouldn't totally rule out non-feeder DCI for 6th.
https://public.tableau.com/app/profile/aaron2446/viz/MSDCSeatsandWaitlistOfferData_draft/MSDCPublicDisplay
I have a kid at Yu Ying and parents seem really nervous about there being enough seats for Chinese. Is that a valid concern? I would dismiss it but it’s a lot of parents.
I think it's fine for everyone older than preschool and K this year, and not enough seats for kids in preschool and K this year.
I will point out that DCI has made a lot of Chinese non-feeder offers for 6th.
I checked and I think DCI’s total number of Chinese offers (70ish across YY- 48 this year, 52 last year- and the lottery- 8 on match day and 31 by June) would cover all of YY’s pre-k 3 offers the last two years (71). The question is if only 17 odd kids are going from YY to DCI, or whatever else is going on with that.
Anonymous wrote:
No it’s not big. The average is a little over 200 kids to a grade. It’s a medium size school. I graduated high school with about 350 kids.
Yes, it’s more competitive to get into some of the popular sports but at least they have a ton of sports options which Cooper basically doesn’t and they have fields. Plus they play against other schools in conferences since they can field teams and are competitive.