Anonymous wrote:There were many factors being considered for the re-launching of Eastern. During the planning period for Eastern many of us who were in attendance, were constantly informed that the neighborhood was "changing." Which took on a mind of its own, regarding the definition. Many took it as diversity was among the elementary and middle-schools and therefore it will reach Eastern too. In a sense there was this expectation that the inaugural freshmen class would have a diverse population of which was heavily forcasted by all of the DCPS hiearchy. Unfortunately, someone forgot to tell the diverse population that they were all expected. The end result was that whites still feel that Eastern is not prepared enough for their child[ren] and that is fine with me. But do not make it a negative for those who selected Eastern as their high-school choice. No you shouldn't have any regrets but please be fair when assessing us and don't just disregard us becuase we're not diverse.
Anonymous wrote:Eastern's attendance record is quite respectable and ranks high among comprehensive schools. This take over talk has been going on as long as you lived on the hill. It is not going to happen, Eastern is hotbed politically, if you don't know you better ask someone. We are doubling in our successes and within 11 months or so we will be tripling in our successes. Eastern was being exclusively prepared for a diverse population and guess who used the race card and now regrets it? As Kaya said let's call a spade a spade and I have to agree with my Chancellor on that one!
Anonymous wrote:12:02, why in the hell would they close Eastern after they have vested so much into relaunching the school. Where in the hell have you been for the past two-years, living in fog? As for the priority listing, if you are using that as a barometer, then you are HIGH CLARICE. Crap, they left Cardozo off the list and they are deemed a dropout factory. What do you mean ALL children, white person? You are tired of DCPS boosterism, then get to stepping to the area that peaks your fancy. Oh!! we would love to see a chartering authority take over Eastern as you have noticed the high-schools that are charter-school sanctioned are heavily African-American populated. Salad-booster this fact, sweetie, there's not enough white people in the neighborhood to make a difference. To use your data, you might lived in the neighborhood for 10-20 years but you are not school boundary worthy. When you get that status, then come and visit Eastern, you'll just might like it. You do realize that Eastern was a citywide accomplishment?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I fully understand those of you who have already jumped for privates. Unless you land at one of the great schools (and achieving this often means being open to yanking your kid out of their current school late Sept/Oct), the DC "school dance" can make your head explode.
I know that PP affirms that so in different words but I wanted to point out that this assertion of his/her is already no longer true. If you've followed this forum, you'll know that Latin, Basis, DC Prep, and Cap City all went through their entire waitlists and have spare spots in 5th grade this year. There is absolutely no reason to throw a panic and yank children out at 4th grade to participate in the "school dance". For at least a couple more years, we can now actually sit back and relax while applying for 6th grade everywhere. Now, will it look that way still in 2015, that's a different story but I think things will look up more generally at that point, not only more spots but more quality spots, public and charter.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I fully understand those of you who have already jumped for privates. Unless you land at one of the great schools (and achieving this often means being open to yanking your kid out of their current school late Sept/Oct), the DC "school dance" can make your head explode.
I know that PP affirms that so in different words but I wanted to point out that this assertion of his/her is already no longer true. If you've followed this forum, you'll know that Latin, Basis, DC Prep, and Cap City all went through their entire waitlists and have spare spots in 5th grade this year. There is absolutely no reason to throw a panic and yank children out at 4th grade to participate in the "school dance". For at least a couple more years, we can now actually sit back and relax while applying for 6th grade everywhere. Now, will it look that way still in 2015, that's a different story but I think things will look up more generally at that point, not only more spots but more quality spots, public and charter.
Anonymous wrote:I fully understand those of you who have already jumped for privates. Unless you land at one of the great schools (and achieving this often means being open to yanking your kid out of their current school late Sept/Oct), the DC "school dance" can make your head explode.
The post about Mandarin relates to the Oyster-Adams version, which is run differently, and taught to kids who are already bilingual (English/Spanish)Anonymous wrote:Deal kid are getting a light dose of Mandarin, heavy on the culture. The idea that they will be fluent is a joke. Not unlike the ideal that there are lots of desirable middle schools in DCPS.
Anonymous wrote:Here we go again with this arrogance of no middle-school(s) could possibly be ready by 2015. It's a crystal ball look and not a concrete look. So, what if I am the Eastern salad booster...have I been wrong about Eastern? You're probably already high Clarice? There's no need to share my weed with you because your paranoia has already set in.