Anonymous wrote:"what can we as parents DO about this if we get together? "
It's not a cure-all since it would of course not address curriculum faillings, but fighting against those that oppose ability grouping would in my view be a good start.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I hear you, OP. I live in Silver Spring and have a really crappy ES school to choose from, a mediocre middle school, and the DCC high schools to choose from for my DD. My DH and I don't have the money to buy in Bethesda or CC (or Potomac or Rockville). We're stuck. It burns me up that we pay the same rate in taxes and have nothing to show for it from a schools perspective.
Ah, but your house is likely much less expensive. Brick 40's colonial much less expensive in your location than Bethesda or Chevy Chase, so those folks do pay more in taxes, for same house. Just different location of land.
Anonymous wrote:I hear you, OP. I live in Silver Spring and have a really crappy ES school to choose from, a mediocre middle school, and the DCC high schools to choose from for my DD. My DH and I don't have the money to buy in Bethesda or CC (or Potomac or Rockville). We're stuck. It burns me up that we pay the same rate in taxes and have nothing to show for it from a schools perspective.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A movement for what?
Kind of vague I know but I meant a movement of parents to increase the options and quality of instruction for academically advanced kids in the DCC. I hear these frustrations from parents a lot and I know a lot of parents willing to do anything they can but don't know where to start.
Anonymous wrote:To the OP or anyone else who has any ideas, what can we as parents DO about this if we get together? Sending the cream of the crop off to magnets does not seem to solve the problem -- it just kicks it down the road for other families to deal with. I know dozens of families who would join a movement but I don't know what it would look like or what it could accomplish. What would a solution look like? I would seriously be part of it.
Anonymous wrote:A movement for what?
Anonymous wrote:YOU chose to live in that area. So instead of complaining deal.
Didn't you look at schools before moving? Or, better yet, didn't you save up for private school knowing you'd move into a school district that was not "acceptable" to you?
If dumb is in the genes, don't bother to apply to magnets.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:To the OP: at least your kids got into the magnet programs --- MOST kids don't, so they end up in their neighborhood schools.
AND GUESS WHAT? MOST kids do just great!
The MCPS curriculum IS UNIFORM across the county. The only different variable from school to school is student population.
Finally, to all the haters on various threads about Olney/Brookeville: This is precisely why families move out to Olney/Brookeville --- where the housing is affordable and the schools are excellent. Sure the commute to DC super stinks, but that's the trade-off people make when they can't afford Bethesda, Potomac, CC or the nice part of K-town.
These are contradictory statements. If the MCPS curriculum is uniform, and MOST kids do just great, then why do you need to move to Olney/Brookeville for "excellent" schools?
Not the PP, but I'm sure he/she is trying to say that if you want MCPS, housing in Olney is an affordable way to get it. The alternative for the price range may be outside of MCPS. Nothing about the post that is contradictory.
If she is the poster who writes about Olney from time to time, she moved from close-in SS to Olney.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:To the OP: at least your kids got into the magnet programs --- MOST kids don't, so they end up in their neighborhood schools.
AND GUESS WHAT? MOST kids do just great!
The MCPS curriculum IS UNIFORM across the county. The only different variable from school to school is student population.
Finally, to all the haters on various threads about Olney/Brookeville: This is precisely why families move out to Olney/Brookeville --- where the housing is affordable and the schools are excellent. Sure the commute to DC super stinks, but that's the trade-off people make when they can't afford Bethesda, Potomac, CC or the nice part of K-town.
These are contradictory statements. If the MCPS curriculum is uniform, and MOST kids do just great, then why do you need to move to Olney/Brookeville for "excellent" schools?
Not the PP, but I'm sure he/she is trying to say that if you want MCPS, housing in Olney is an affordable way to get it. The alternative for the price range may be outside of MCPS. Nothing about the post that is contradictory.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:To the OP: at least your kids got into the magnet programs --- MOST kids don't, so they end up in their neighborhood schools.
AND GUESS WHAT? MOST kids do just great!
The MCPS curriculum IS UNIFORM across the county. The only different variable from school to school is student population.
Finally, to all the haters on various threads about Olney/Brookeville: This is precisely why families move out to Olney/Brookeville --- where the housing is affordable and the schools are excellent. Sure the commute to DC super stinks, but that's the trade-off people make when they can't afford Bethesda, Potomac, CC or the nice part of K-town.
These are contradictory statements. If the MCPS curriculum is uniform, and MOST kids do just great, then why do you need to move to Olney/Brookeville for "excellent" schools?