Thing is the Ross example worked the other way around. Increases in test scores have been for grades that are majority OOB. Only once the scores increased did IB families fill up the lower grades.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So the answer to OP is to have neighborhoods with more million dollar homes?
Or to convince more people in those million dollar home neighborhoods to actually send their kids to their neighborhood school. Not all of them--some will always choose private or charter (if they snag a spot at LAMB, YY, etc.)--but enough to fill up 1-2 PK classes (having PK3 available is key to get more in-boundary folks). And then, each grade needs to be kept relatively small so that the school can maintain as high an in-boundary percentage as possible. The good test scores will follow when these higher in-boundary cohorts reach testing grades.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Okay, but renting an apartment for 3k is the same think basically...
Point taken.
Anonymous wrote:Okay, but renting an apartment for 3k is the same think basically...
Anonymous wrote:You just need families who can afford to live near DuPont Circle. Easy.
Anonymous wrote:We don't attend Ross but live very close by and would have proximity status. However, it's very hard to get in OOB, and for prek it's impossible. They likely won't go through their top 5 on the WL this year. Ross has one class per grade with an extremely active parent association. But, primarily, as others have stated, it's a very wealthy area with very wealthy families. You take any school with 22 kids per grade, most of whom live in million dollar plus homes, and the outcome is likely to be success.
Anonymous wrote:We don't attend Ross but live very close by and would have proximity status. However, it's very hard to get in OOB, and for prek it's impossible. They likely won't go through their top 5 on the WL this year. Ross has one class per grade with an extremely active parent association. But, primarily, as others have stated, it's a very wealthy area with very wealthy families. You take any school with 22 kids per grade, most of whom live in million dollar plus homes, and the outcome is likely to be success.
Anonymous wrote:So the answer to OP is to have neighborhoods with more million dollar homes?
Anonymous wrote:No, but the school has seen a major change of staff and admin since SWW took over. There has been some negative feedback from high school families but it has been a win for the PK-8 school which is doing well. I would go as far as saying FS@SWW is the next Ross.Anonymous wrote:Which high school? There is no affiliation with SWW for applications.