Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes, that's the other thing, OP. Janney's population are mostly all able to give significantly to the PTA. You are never going to have that happen in Petworth. If your 30-40 gentrifier families all kick in $100, per child, every year they're at Powell, they still will not come anywhere close to the budget of the Janney PTA.
I would guess most "gentrifier" families are able/willing to give more than $100, but the point is still taken.
Anonymous wrote:OP- Poster here. This is a great debate. I can take the criticism because I am willing to ask the questions that most of peers would not. Most people who can leave- don't ask what they can do for DC schools- they just leave or go private.
If I wanted to live in Arlington or Bethesda it wouldnt be a problem. But I'm not putting myself in that suburban nightmare. I'd prefer to stay in the city and really help to improve things.
When I look at the resources that DCPS has to spend its hard to think that an active PTA can't help transform any school into a great school. I'm just wondering if too many DC parents of underperforming schools aren't willing (or aren't able) to do all they can to turn things around.
Anonymous wrote:OP- Poster here. This is a great debate. I can take the criticism because I am willing to ask the questions that most of peers would not. Most people who can leave- don't ask what they can do for DC schools- they just leave or go private.
If I wanted to live in Arlington or Bethesda it wouldnt be a problem. But I'm not putting myself in that suburban nightmare. I'd prefer to stay in the city and really help to improve things.
When I look at the resources that DCPS has to spend its hard to think that an active PTA can't help transform any school into a great school. I'm just wondering if too many DC parents of underperforming schools aren't willing (or aren't able) to do all they can to turn things around.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes, that's the other thing, OP. Janney's population are mostly all able to give significantly to the PTA. You are never going to have that happen in Petworth. If your 30-40 gentrifier families all kick in $100, per child, every year they're at Powell, they still will not come anywhere close to the budget of the Janney PTA.
I would guess most "gentrifier" families are able/willing to give more than $100, but the point is still taken.
Anonymous wrote:Yes, that's the other thing, OP. Janney's population are mostly all able to give significantly to the PTA. You are never going to have that happen in Petworth. If your 30-40 gentrifier families all kick in $100, per child, every year they're at Powell, they still will not come anywhere close to the budget of the Janney PTA.
Anonymous wrote:We live in Petworth and are considering our options for elementary schools. I can't help feeling that with the recent neighborhood improvements in housing stock and HHI that there are is now a critical mass of highly educated and well off parents.
Has anyone ever tried to form an action group with other higher SES parents to work on their local school. We are looking at Powell and wondering if 30-40 well of parents enrolled their children and took an active interest in the school they could really turn things around and continue to increase the school quality through raising additional funds, establishing more after school programs, increasing the clubs and holding teachers and the principal to account etc.. If it can happen at Janney etc, why not elsewhere?
We have some decent teachers, and alot of momentum. Do people think a group of parents could really make the difference in one DC school. Or are we stuck with the poorly performing students dragging everyone else down?