Anonymous wrote:jsteele wrote:
What would be the goal and end result of such a policy? As I understand it, redistricting is supposed to solve the problem of overcrowding. If you change Crestwood's middle and high school boundaries, you would have almost no impact on overcrowding. Additional changes with more impact would still have to be made.
Terrible argument. Every bit helps. And, moreover, policy is made at the margins.
jsteele wrote:
What would be the goal and end result of such a policy? As I understand it, redistricting is supposed to solve the problem of overcrowding. If you change Crestwood's middle and high school boundaries, you would have almost no impact on overcrowding. Additional changes with more impact would still have to be made.
Anonymous wrote:jsteele wrote:Anonymous wrote:I know I'm personalizing this but you popped up as the Crestwood DCPS parent. I assume that before Deal/Wilson your child did not follow the DCPS feeder pattern. So few do, by either opting out of DCPS or going west for a Deal feeder, I feel like no accommodation should be made for Crestwood at all.
I don't follow your logic. Are you suggesting that parents that don't send their kids to their in-boundary elementary schools should be punished by being redistricted out of their current middle and high schools? Can you further explain your position?
Sure. Parents who don't put their kids in DCPS or follow the student assignment and feeder patterns should be given less weight in the student assignment and feeder pattern process.
jsteele wrote:Anonymous wrote:I know I'm personalizing this but you popped up as the Crestwood DCPS parent. I assume that before Deal/Wilson your child did not follow the DCPS feeder pattern. So few do, by either opting out of DCPS or going west for a Deal feeder, I feel like no accommodation should be made for Crestwood at all.
I don't follow your logic. Are you suggesting that parents that don't send their kids to their in-boundary elementary schools should be punished by being redistricted out of their current middle and high schools? Can you further explain your position?
Anonymous wrote:I know I'm personalizing this but you popped up as the Crestwood DCPS parent. I assume that before Deal/Wilson your child did not follow the DCPS feeder pattern. So few do, by either opting out of DCPS or going west for a Deal feeder, I feel like no accommodation should be made for Crestwood at all.
Anonymous wrote:jsteele wrote:
There are DCPS families in Crestwood. We are one of them. Obviously, I have no idea what will happen and you may be right that Crestwood is on the chopping block. But, from a political vantage point, that makes no sense. Cutting Crestwood out of Deal and Wilson saves very few seats. On the other hand, it will piss off 1,000 some fairly wealthy and politically active families that will worry about their property values. So, politically, the cost benefit analysis doesn't make sense. Which of course, probably means nothing.
Powell or West?
I assume neither.
jsteele wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Let the fun begin! Who chimes in first, Lafayette or Brent?
Or, "we need to stay IB for Deal" from the Bancroft and Sheperd addresses
That's why I won't buy in the Shepherd Park, or Crestwood neighborhoods right now. Too unpredictable.
I would agree that Crestwood is on the chopping block.
are there any DCPS families there?
There are DCPS families in Crestwood. We are one of them. Obviously, I have no idea what will happen and you may be right that Crestwood is on the chopping block. But, from a political vantage point, that makes no sense. Cutting Crestwood out of Deal and Wilson saves very few seats. On the other hand, it will piss off 1,000 some fairly wealthy and politically active families that will worry about their property values. So, politically, the cost benefit analysis doesn't make sense. Which of course, probably means nothing.
Powell or West?
I assume neither.
jsteele wrote:Anonymous wrote:jsteele wrote:
Another note on this article: Does Emma Brown know any DCPS parents other than Chris Sondreal? Why would she discuss school boundaries with a parent of an application-only school student? She may has well have talked to a charter school parent.
I am confused--isn't he a Francis-Stevens PK parent? That is not application only.
I guess I was reading too fast. It says something about his kid's classmates at School Without Walls at Francis Stevens and I read that as School Without Wall which is application only. Now that I think about it, I have no idea what School Without Walls at Francis Stevens is.
Francis-Stevens and SWW merged last year. But they are separate schools. SWW is still application-only, and F-S is a regular PK-8 DCPS.
Anonymous wrote:jsteele wrote:
Another note on this article: Does Emma Brown know any DCPS parents other than Chris Sondreal? Why would she discuss school boundaries with a parent of an application-only school student? She may has well have talked to a charter school parent.
I am confused--isn't he a Francis-Stevens PK parent? That is not application only.