Anonymous wrote:Disagree about politicians and unions being the push behind this for sake of "equity". It is more so parents that actually live next to desirable charters that want in.
Anonymous wrote:So now they want us to be either IB or OOB for charters? This is getting ridiculous. Just fix the neighborhood schools!
Anonymous wrote:why not just fix DCPS and allow them to have their own curriculum? allowing a for-profit school system to creep over and take over schools is not very smart. Charter is not the answer.
Anonymous wrote:[
I was with you until you revealed yourself to be an idiot in the second paragraph.
This isn't about YY families; you're fruitlessly complaining about one of the most diverse public schools in the entire city. Furthermore, even if pigs flew and you were correct, who in Chinatown do you suppose is going to give up a gorgeous 40,000 sq. ft. facility + 3 acre lot for an outdoor nature center and classrooms?
Neighborhood preference sounds good only if it's an opt-in situation.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:yes, I am ok with the exception outlined above. But otherwise, horrible idea. People who can afford to buy near a good neighborhood school can already buy their way into a decent school. The charter school lottery as it exists provides a more level playing field. And these schools are moving around like crazy, which would make it a nightmare.
On Capitol Hill many with tiny tots buy cramped homes near the two or three decent elementary schools but buy larger home near crappy ones, hoping for improvement that never comes. Then they move to the burbs or go private. Like a lot of Hill'ite, I'd like to see DCPS close a couple elementary schools and one middle school. If these schools went charter, and the new schools were as good as Two Rivers, or better, and Hill folk had neighborhood preference, voila, many more middle-class familie would stay. Not such a horrible idea around here.
What are the YY parents afraid of, more AA kids from the neighborhood? Well, then move the school to Chinatown if the law is proposed and passes why don't you and draw in actual bilingual families, horrors.
Anonymous wrote:This is largely a bad idea for the following reasons: Those who need choice most because their neighborhood schools aren't cutting it will lose out once again because few to no charter schools locate in those areas. Likewise on the other end of the spectrum: those who live in expensive neighborhoods will have no charter options (not that I care but to the extent that they're interested in such special offers as language or need access to alternative learning models it's not fair). By the same token, it would be horribly unfair to tell those who live near a specialty charter school that's now where they feed into (oh, btw, your children now all speak Mandarin Chinese). The moving around of charters is a problem, too.
I could see an exception to this conclusion in the following situation: If a charter moves into a former public school building/boundary and commits to DC educational standards, then I'd be in favor. This would be a convincing move to unhinge a neighborhood school from the DCPS shackles and give it the autonomy to serve its students well. (Not to mention that this would be a welcome opportunity to test whether charters can truly deliver on that promise.)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:yes, I am ok with the exception outlined above. But otherwise, horrible idea. People who can afford to buy near a good neighborhood school can already buy their way into a decent school. The charter school lottery as it exists provides a more level playing field. And these schools are moving around like crazy, which would make it a nightmare.
On Capitol Hill many with tiny tots buy cramped homes near the two or three decent elementary schools but buy larger home near crappy ones, hoping for improvement that never comes. Then they move to the burbs or go private. Like a lot of Hill'ite, I'd like to see DCPS close a couple elementary schools and one middle school. If these schools went charter, and the new schools were as good as Two Rivers, or better, and Hill folk had neighborhood preference, voila, many more middle-class familie would stay. Not such a horrible idea around here.
What are the YY parents afraid of, more AA kids from the neighborhood? Well, then move the school to Chinatown if the law is proposed and passes why don't you and draw in actual bilingual families, horrors.
Anonymous wrote:yes, I am ok with the exception outlined above. But otherwise, horrible idea. People who can afford to buy near a good neighborhood school can already buy their way into a decent school. The charter school lottery as it exists provides a more level playing field. And these schools are moving around like crazy, which would make it a nightmare.