Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:+1. DCPS sucks at planning to manage capacity at high-demand schools. It's not hard to find evidence of this at elementary schools where Maryland address cheaters are hardly seen. E.g. Janney had a big renovation just a few years ago, but new classroom trailers will be used in the fall because the school is already out of classroom space. Brent just got 2 classroom trailers on its small playground (without room for any more) with no major renovation scheduled.
And yet, Janney has made 2 offers to K OOB students and 1 offer to a 3rd grade student on its waitlist (per MSDC, by June).
The principal apparently doesn't agree that the school is 'out of classroom space.'
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's not just DCPS, I know residency cheaters at Breakthrough, Bridges and Bethune.
OIG's request asked OSSE for info on every public school student -- charters and DCPS.
Breakthrough and Shepherd had high percentages of problematic residency documents in the 2017-18 audit.
Will these schools still have these problems?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:+1. DCPS sucks at planning to manage capacity at high-demand schools. It's not hard to find evidence of this at elementary schools where Maryland address cheaters are hardly seen. E.g. Janney had a big renovation just a few years ago, but new classroom trailers will be used in the fall because the school is already out of classroom space. Brent just got 2 classroom trailers on its small playground (without room for any more) with no major renovation scheduled.
And yet, Janney has made 2 offers to K OOB students and 1 offer to a 3rd grade student on its waitlist (per MSDC, by June).
The principal apparently doesn't agree that the school is 'out of classroom space.'
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Schools have every incentive to keep warm bodies in the seats so they can continue getting funds for each child.
If the OIG really makes a meaningful impact and roots out fraud, I think we will see some degree of school consolidation and closing down of certain fly-by-night charters.
Agreed - expect charter leaders to fight this tooth and nail. Lots of city planners have no idea where all the kids have been coming from - even with the gentrifiers baby boom.
A lot of more mediocre charters stay afloat padded by these cheaters from MD. It would be so amazing if they really manage to pull an Ellington on them all! Close them down, make room (literally - make buildings available) for the better schools to expand.
This
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Schools have every incentive to keep warm bodies in the seats so they can continue getting funds for each child.
If the OIG really makes a meaningful impact and roots out fraud, I think we will see some degree of school consolidation and closing down of certain fly-by-night charters.
Agreed - expect charter leaders to fight this tooth and nail. Lots of city planners have no idea where all the kids have been coming from - even with the gentrifiers baby boom.
A lot of more mediocre charters stay afloat padded by these cheaters from MD. It would be so amazing if they really manage to pull an Ellington on them all! Close them down, make room (literally - make buildings available) for the better schools to expand.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Schools have every incentive to keep warm bodies in the seats so they can continue getting funds for each child.
If the OIG really makes a meaningful impact and roots out fraud, I think we will see some degree of school consolidation and closing down of certain fly-by-night charters.
Agreed - expect charter leaders to fight this tooth and nail. Lots of city planners have no idea where all the kids have been coming from - even with the gentrifiers baby boom.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:+1. DCPS sucks at planning to manage capacity at high-demand schools. It's not hard to find evidence of this at elementary schools where Maryland address cheaters are hardly seen. E.g. Janney had a big renovation just a few years ago, but new classroom trailers will be used in the fall because the school is already out of classroom space. Brent just got 2 classroom trailers on its small playground (without room for any more) with no major renovation scheduled.
And yet, Janney has made 2 offers to K OOB students and 1 offer to a 3rd grade student on its waitlist (per MSDC, by June).
The principal apparently doesn't agree that the school is 'out of classroom space.'
Anonymous wrote:+1. DCPS sucks at planning to manage capacity at high-demand schools. It's not hard to find evidence of this at elementary schools where Maryland address cheaters are hardly seen. E.g. Janney had a big renovation just a few years ago, but new classroom trailers will be used in the fall because the school is already out of classroom space. Brent just got 2 classroom trailers on its small playground (without room for any more) with no major renovation scheduled.
Anonymous wrote:+1. DCPS sucks at planning to manage capacity at high-demand schools. It's not hard to find evidence of this at elementary schools where Maryland address cheaters are hardly seen. E.g. Janney had a big renovation just a few years ago, but new classroom trailers will be used in the fall because the school is already out of classroom space. Brent just got 2 classroom trailers on its small playground (without room for any more) with no major renovation scheduled.
Anonymous wrote:+1. DCPS sucks at planning to manage capacity at high-demand schools. It's not hard to find evidence of this at elementary schools where Maryland address cheaters are hardly seen. E.g. Janney had a big renovation just a few years ago, but new classroom trailers will be used in the fall because the school is already out of classroom space. Brent just got 2 classroom trailers on its small playground (without room for any more) with no major renovation scheduled.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Schools have every incentive to keep warm bodies in the seats so they can continue getting funds for each child.
If the OIG really makes a meaningful impact and roots out fraud, I think we will see some degree of school consolidation and closing down of certain fly-by-night charters.
Agreed - expect charter leaders to fight this tooth and nail. Lots of city planners have no idea where all the kids have been coming from - even with the gentrifiers baby boom.
One of my biggest issues is that the fraud completely screws up city planning. How are we to open more schools to meet demand when we don't even know where the demand is needed?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Schools have every incentive to keep warm bodies in the seats so they can continue getting funds for each child.
If the OIG really makes a meaningful impact and roots out fraud, I think we will see some degree of school consolidation and closing down of certain fly-by-night charters.
Agreed - expect charter leaders to fight this tooth and nail. Lots of city planners have no idea where all the kids have been coming from - even with the gentrifiers baby boom.