Anonymous wrote:
Exactly. 14:20 quoted me. I have nothing against Deal-- just against the inequality in the system and stressed out b/c Deal is not in-boundary school. And I don't live in Cap Hill either. I live in Ward 5. We have NO middle school. That's just not fair. Where can I send my kid for middle school? How likely is it that he could get into Deal or Latin? Those are the only decent options from what I can see. It's just depressing.
Anonymous wrote:To posters who believe anyone is begrudging Deal's successes, I read it as the opposite. It's a complaint about the inequity across the board. And there should also be a big concern that as Deal has become THE MS to get into right now if all of the in-boundary students keep choosing Deal rather than private (recent past history shows this peeled away numbers of in-bounds) there will no longer be any room for the OOB struggling students that certainly do benefit by the mix. As for Rhee's support of Kim, sure it's helped Deal. But what about all of the other principals, particularly across town? No facility and programming can begin to compare.
Anonymous wrote:"It is about finding a great principal."
Yes, I would have to agree. I would also have to add that the majority of the principals Rhee appointed are underwhelming.
I think the churn in the leadership on the school level and the low-quality of the leaders Rhee appointed is something that will hobble DCPS for years to come.
Anonymous wrote:I agree with everything you write and it is very well put.
There is no animus on my part towards Deal. You are possibly reading that into the comments and feeling defensive.
The animus is toward a SYSTEM that ALLOWS this kind of drastic inequity.
Let's continue to advocate througout the system for all those great ideas you listed to lift up all middle schools.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Deal MS represents the utter failure of Michelle Rhee. Why? When she came on board Deal was good. Now that she's gone, Deal has benefitted from $250/sq ft. renovations, skylights, IB programming, organized athletcis, uniforms that fit, fencing teams plus valuable suits for loan, better cafeteria food, excellent band/instrumental options, differentiated instruction, foreign languages. And where is Deal? Major Upper Caucasia. Why isn't Deal's model replicated anywhere else? Easier to wine and dine with the upper NW parents. What school south of the park has I-Macs in every classroom smart boards on every wall, web-based email, excellent musical and theatre facilties, etc.. etc...where else? The parents didn't pay for this stuff. So who did? Who compares? We're going to be forced to pay private tuition in a couple of years because the ever-tight Deal boundaries are only getting tighter and tighter...shrink-wrapping the W3 mostly white kids into one fabulously free and unique MS. 'Nuff Said.
I don't get your post.
I do get this post. On consecutive days, I visited both Deal and Jeferson Middle Schools. The fact that Deal is provided with everything it needs to thrive and Jefferson is literally left to "die on the vine" is what the pp is getting at. Kids at Jefferson ( and many other schools I am sure ) are left to learn in truly abominable conditions...from the quality of teaching to the obvious health hazards throughout the building.
I get it too. Point is also that the kids at Deal, due to their SES, are likely to excel anyway, when kids that may need extra resources don't get it. Why?? It's completely unfair.