Anonymous wrote:There were plenty of spots at Latin and Basis this year for 6th grade. Again, way to build the panic.
It's all uncertain when it comes to public schools in DC. Take a deep breath and deal with it and stop sharing your fear everywhere.
I really wish Brent parents would STFU about Basis and do something constructive, like back off the standardized testing mania courtesy of DCPS.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:here is the inside scoop for Brent.
the boundry actually includes a lot of low income housing, but the housing does not look like traditional "public housing." There is a soup kitchen just around the block from Brent and and two others within three blocks, that I know of. There is a homeless shelter and a home for battered women-- but again, they are not obvious from the outside. The neighborhood is generally appalled that it is becoming so difficult for working class people to afford to live in the neighborhood and is working very hard to ensure more low to moderate income housing stock is added to the area.
Off topic, but how do you propose adding more housing stock to the neighborhood? Are you advocating developing the Congressional parking lots?
Yeah, I was wondering this as well. How in the world is the "neighborhood" working to ensure that low income housing is added to the area? Where would this be, and how would one propose to do it? Because if the recent threads on MoTH were any indication, they would put a bulldozer to Potomac Gardens if they had their way. So I'm pretty much calling BS on this big neighborhood push to add more low income housing to the Hill.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:here is the inside scoop for Brent.
the boundry actually includes a lot of low income housing, but the housing does not look like traditional "public housing." There is a soup kitchen just around the block from Brent and and two others within three blocks, that I know of. There is a homeless shelter and a home for battered women-- but again, they are not obvious from the outside. The neighborhood is generally appalled that it is becoming so difficult for working class people to afford to live in the neighborhood and is working very hard to ensure more low to moderate income housing stock is added to the area.
Off topic, but how do you propose adding more housing stock to the neighborhood? Are you advocating developing the Congressional parking lots?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:FWIW, BASIS seems to have become a de-facto "feeder" for the better Capitol Hill schools like Brent and St. Peters - though it needs to be at 5th grade. I believe BASIS won't be accepting many if any at the higher grades.
Excellent BASIS shilling. Nicely done and way to build the fear. "If you don't leave now, your little darling will be stuck at Jefferson."
BASIS is 3 month old experiment. Just because you feel comfortable taking that chance on your child, not everyone does. Please stop feeding the frenzy that creams 5th graders off to an untested middle school.
Anonymous wrote:here is the inside scoop for Brent.
the boundry actually includes a lot of low income housing, but the housing does not look like traditional "public housing." There is a soup kitchen just around the block from Brent and and two others within three blocks, that I know of. There is a homeless shelter and a home for battered women-- but again, they are not obvious from the outside. The neighborhood is generally appalled that it is becoming so difficult for working class people to afford to live in the neighborhood and is working very hard to ensure more low to moderate income housing stock is added to the area.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:FWIW, BASIS seems to have become a de-facto "feeder" for the better Capitol Hill schools like Brent and St. Peters - though it needs to be at 5th grade. I believe BASIS won't be accepting many if any at the higher grades.
Excellent BASIS shilling. Nicely done and way to build the fear. "If you don't leave now, your little darling will be stuck at Jefferson."
BASIS is 3 month old experiment. Just because you feel comfortable taking that chance on your child, not everyone does. Please stop feeding the frenzy that creams 5th graders off to an untested middle school.
Anonymous wrote:FWIW, BASIS seems to have become a de-facto "feeder" for the better Capitol Hill schools like Brent and St. Peters - though it needs to be at 5th grade. I believe BASIS won't be accepting many if any at the higher grades.
Anonymous wrote:OP, look at the "Is Brent the Best School on Capitol Hill" thread from earlier this year to learn all about Brent.
When we were house hunting 5 years ago, we went as far as attending PTA meetings at Watkin, Maury and Brent. Maury is keeping more high-SES families every year, but they still lose more than Brent after 2nd. Brent and Maury both have such a problem with their middle school feeders (Eliot-Hine) that their 5th grades are entirely AA.
http://www.dcurbanmom.com/jforum/posts/list/246031.page#2567031