Anonymous wrote:Ok let's walk through what would occur
No boundaries
1. All the high SES people would be pissed for overpaying for their homes
2. All the high SES people would leave and DCPS would see an even greater drop in scores
3. The charters would continue to help low income students
Adding more Housing Stock
I don't see how this changes the current situation of some wealthy enclaves with great neighborhood schools with the majority of schools being bad and charters helping to filll the gap
Adding more housing stock might get you more middle income families but.... aren't these the people that fled DC orginially and went to the suburbs.... for better schools..... why would they come back to DC now?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Either fix the housing market (build way more units than we currently do, at all levels, to increase affordability for young families), or decouple housing from education (ie, no boundaries). Everything else is incrementalism (charters) or window dressing.
I agree with the accuracy of this assessment and solution. I selfishly hope this solution never occurs in the District of Columbia, as a homeowner with unvested interest in keeping my home price high and as a District resident who needs to travel via car and public transit across the city during "school commute hours."
Anonymous wrote:Either fix the housing market (build way more units than we currently do, at all levels, to increase affordability for young families), or decouple housing from education (ie, no boundaries). Everything else is incrementalism (charters) or window dressing.
We do it every day at the elementary level using guided math and guided reading. Online programs, such as i-Ready and Lexia are tailored to the individual learner. Other subjects, such as social studies and science, are taught at grade level. It helps to have a large classroom library with text levels ranging from primary to high school. Reading aloud while students follow along an above-level text is another strategy for challenging high achievers while building vocabulary and background knowledge of students who are below level.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In some ways, yes, they are at odds. It is pretty difficult to run a classroom and teach kids who vary widely in their academics. Differentiating by +/- one year in grade level is possible, but not much more than that (absent a much larger teaching staff than what is economically feasible for a public school system). I don't believe that it is feasible to teach a class of 7th graders from all SES levels when some are reading at the 7th, 8th, 9th, 10th grade levels and others are reading at the 3rd grade level.
We do it every day at the elementary level using guided math and guided reading. Online programs, such as i-Ready and Lexia are tailored to the individual learner. Other subjects, such as social studies and science, are taught at grade level. It helps to have a large classroom library with text levels ranging from primary to high school. Reading aloud while students follow along an above-level text is another strategy for challenging high achievers while building vocabulary and background knowledge of students who are below level.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't know why everyone is making this so complicated
People should just stay in their neighborhood schools and quit trying to game the system
At each school you would have a high medium and low track.
Capitol Hill is the classic case of overcompliaction. If everyone would just go to their zoned school things would be fine
Says another individual who either didn't live here, or didn't have school aged children in the 90s.
If you didn't experience what it was like here before school choice - you can't really comment.
Let those of us who fought for the charter movement and kicked and screaming and clawed to get the OOB lottery what is tell you a bit about when everyone went to their IB school.
Pull up a chair youngster.
Nope sorry I don't want to reward people who chose to live in a crappy area because they are too cheap or can't afford to buy in a good school district. Neighborhood schools are the only fair option. You should have sent your kids to private, or moved to a decent district like everyone else did.
Anonymous wrote:In some ways, yes, they are at odds. It is pretty difficult to run a classroom and teach kids who vary widely in their academics. Differentiating by +/- one year in grade level is possible, but not much more than that (absent a much larger teaching staff than what is economically feasible for a public school system). I don't believe that it is feasible to teach a class of 7th graders from all SES levels when some are reading at the 7th, 8th, 9th, 10th grade levels and others are reading at the 3rd grade level.
Anonymous wrote:I never said I was against Charters
Here is the real problem
Most of the children in the DC area are extremely low performing
In that scenario you need to protect the few productive members of society with neighborhood schools in high SES areas
Yes I am for charters the past what 30-50 years have a been a failure. Its time to try something else for the 80% mostly black kids in DC who come into school very unprepared
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't know why everyone is making this so complicated
People should just stay in their neighborhood schools and quit trying to game the system
At each school you would have a high medium and low track.
Capitol Hill is the classic case of overcompliaction. If everyone would just go to their zoned school things would be fine
Says another individual who either didn't live here, or didn't have school aged children in the 90s.
If you didn't experience what it was like here before school choice - you can't really comment.
Let those of us who fought for the charter movement and kicked and screaming and clawed to get the OOB lottery what is tell you a bit about when everyone went to their IB school.
Pull up a chair youngster.
Nope sorry I don't want to reward people who chose to live in a crappy area because they are too cheap or can't afford to buy in a good school district. Neighborhood schools are the only fair option. You should have sent your kids to private, or moved to a decent district like everyone else did.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't know why everyone is making this so complicated
People should just stay in their neighborhood schools and quit trying to game the system
At each school you would have a high medium and low track.
Capitol Hill is the classic case of overcompliaction. If everyone would just go to their zoned school things would be fine
Says another individual who either didn't live here, or didn't have school aged children in the 90s.
If you didn't experience what it was like here before school choice - you can't really comment.
Let those of us who fought for the charter movement and kicked and screaming and clawed to get the OOB lottery what is tell you a bit about when everyone went to their IB school.
Pull up a chair youngster.
Anonymous wrote:I'm in favor of equality of opportunity. I think that means increased integration AND differentiation for kids who need it. We need to move toward a place where differentiation by ability is not so tightly tied to socio-economic status (aka the achievement gap).
The more time I spend thinking and reading and working on this question, the more I'm convinced that what we have is a housing problem, not an education problem. I don't think we can have socioeconomically integrated educational systems when we have such chronically segregated neighborhoods.