Anonymous wrote:Just like shipping WOTP kids to a half-empty school EOTP is a non-starter, so is excluding Bancroft (majority Hispanic) and Shepherd (majority AA) from their historic feeder pattern. One solution from another thread was to pull Ward 4 schools -- Lafayette and Shepherd -- into another middle school together as a compromise where families both east and west of the park feel the "pain" of a new feeder system. A solution like that where no "side" wins is the only thing that's politically viable. The people who bitch about EOTP hipsters or middle-class black families using YOUR schools are sadly bitter and obviously new to how DC works.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:End the oob feeder rights for starters.
It only happened 10 years ago, with Michelle Rhee.
Before that, everyone oob from feeder elementaries had to enter the lottery. Melissa Kim, the Deal principal in those days, believed in kids moving up with their classmates but she kept control of the numbers.
Michelle Rhee changed all that in one moment.
I wouldn’t end OOB feeder rights outright. Instead DCPS should condition the OOB ability to progress on to Deal and Wilson based on grades, test scores and a satisfactory conduct record. It’s a way of saying that DC has invested in certain kids by giving them a sought-after place in a Deal feeder. So then the student has to show that the investment has been worthwhile before DCPS doubles down on that investment. Take some of the spots held by the kids who are weeded out and give other OOB kids the chance at Deal, those who have demonstrated by their records that they will work hard and follow the rules.
Why do you assume that OOB students don't have good grades, test scores, good conduct?
DCPS is a public school system, not a private school. DCPS already has rules that if you are excessively truant or have excessive absences you can lose your OOB privileges. That is more than enough conditions.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:End the oob feeder rights for starters.
It only happened 10 years ago, with Michelle Rhee.
Before that, everyone oob from feeder elementaries had to enter the lottery. Melissa Kim, the Deal principal in those days, believed in kids moving up with their classmates but she kept control of the numbers.
Michelle Rhee changed all that in one moment.
I wouldn’t end OOB feeder rights outright. Instead DCPS should condition the OOB ability to progress on to Deal and Wilson based on grades, test scores and a satisfactory conduct record. It’s a way of saying that DC has invested in certain kids by giving them a sought-after place in a Deal feeder. So then the student has to show that the investment has been worthwhile before DCPS doubles down on that investment. Take some of the spots held by the kids who are weeded out and give other OOB kids the chance at Deal, those who have demonstrated by their records that they will work hard and follow the rules.
Why do you assume that OOB students don't have good grades, test scores, good conduct?
DCPS is a public school system, not a private school. DCPS already has rules that if you are excessively truant or have excessive absences you can lose your OOB privileges. That is more than enough conditions.
The attendance conditions were removed this year.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What does the fire department say?
The fire department says you can fit more bodies in a room than is educationally useful (think about auditoriums). Their main concern is how many exits do you have.
Anonymous wrote:if anyone thinks schools are segregated now, try removing OOB feeder rights and see what happens. Deal could retain some diversity with existing boundaries, but Hardy would become all white
But of course most people on this forum don't care about diversity
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:if anyone thinks schools are segregated now, try removing OOB feeder rights and see what happens. Deal could retain some diversity with existing boundaries, but Hardy would become all white
But of course most people on this forum don't care about diversity
This is a serious question - what about diversity EOTP where there currently is very little. Or I should say where currently very few white students are attending their neighborhood schools.
Folks do realize that most of the so called gentrifiers are not sending their kids to their neighborhood public schools, in part because of charters and in part because of the release valve of Deal and Wilson? And if you got rid of those options you'd actually have diverse public schools EOTP?
Hi, welcome to DCUM. I'm sorry, but although you may feel your question is serious, you have clearly not seriously considered it.
Yep - they obviously don't have kids of their own, or they'd realize that without charters and the "release valve" of Deal and Wilson, those of us EOTP would take our high incomes (but not high enough for 2+ kids @$44k/year private) to the suburbs.
I'm not real sure you can call Deal and Wilson a "release valve" for families EOTP. These kids are all coming from the feeder neighborhoods. If you actually walk around Deal now compared to even 3 or 4 years ago the diversity is almost gone, and the same thing is starting to happen at Wilson. Sorry to say everyone, this fantasy of shipping a bunch of WOTP kids to these underutilized schools is just that - a fantasy. It makes no logistical sense, and I can tell you no matter how progressive a resident of Chevy Chase or AU Park claims to be, the minute you start making their kid part of a social engineering experiment they will go CRAZY. That's why these discussions are all just a bunch of nonsense. NOTHING is going to change, there is no political will for it. And, BTW - I don't generally see a lot of Maryland plates on cars at Deal drop off or other events, but if I do I'll get my private investigator on it STAT.
I came up with release valve and that was not the right term. Bail out option is more like it.
Deal is still very diverse.
And the argument is not to ship WOTP kids EOTP (though that might be necessary to get the required balance and there are some WOTP neighborhoods for which that would not really be such a big deal logistically) but the idea is to stop shipping middle class EOTP kids WOTP to jam packed Wilson & Deal. There are plenty of middle and upper middle class families in Crestwood, Shepherd Park, N Portal Estates, Mt Pleasant, Columbia Heights so you just need to in mass bundle this kids into the same MS & HS.
And by doing so Wilson/Deal can remain diverse by accepting need based kids into the schools.
There is this funny dynamic where EOTP people of color think their enemy when it comes to continued access to Deal/Wilson is wealthy whites living WOTP. But the real cause of overcrowding and the obstacle to improved schools EOTP are white middle class families crossing the park every day for school rather than staying in their own neighborhoods for school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:if anyone thinks schools are segregated now, try removing OOB feeder rights and see what happens. Deal could retain some diversity with existing boundaries, but Hardy would become all white
But of course most people on this forum don't care about diversity
This is a serious question - what about diversity EOTP where there currently is very little. Or I should say where currently very few white students are attending their neighborhood schools.
Folks do realize that most of the so called gentrifiers are not sending their kids to their neighborhood public schools, in part because of charters and in part because of the release valve of Deal and Wilson? And if you got rid of those options you'd actually have diverse public schools EOTP?
Hi, welcome to DCUM. I'm sorry, but although you may feel your question is serious, you have clearly not seriously considered it.
Yep - they obviously don't have kids of their own, or they'd realize that without charters and the "release valve" of Deal and Wilson, those of us EOTP would take our high incomes (but not high enough for 2+ kids @$44k/year private) to the suburbs.
I'm not real sure you can call Deal and Wilson a "release valve" for families EOTP. These kids are all coming from the feeder neighborhoods. If you actually walk around Deal now compared to even 3 or 4 years ago the diversity is almost gone, and the same thing is starting to happen at Wilson. Sorry to say everyone, this fantasy of shipping a bunch of WOTP kids to these underutilized schools is just that - a fantasy. It makes no logistical sense, and I can tell you no matter how progressive a resident of Chevy Chase or AU Park claims to be, the minute you start making their kid part of a social engineering experiment they will go CRAZY. That's why these discussions are all just a bunch of nonsense. NOTHING is going to change, there is no political will for it. And, BTW - I don't generally see a lot of Maryland plates on cars at Deal drop off or other events, but if I do I'll get my private investigator on it STAT.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:if anyone thinks schools are segregated now, try removing OOB feeder rights and see what happens. Deal could retain some diversity with existing boundaries, but Hardy would become all white
But of course most people on this forum don't care about diversity
This is a serious question - what about diversity EOTP where there currently is very little. Or I should say where currently very few white students are attending their neighborhood schools.
Folks do realize that most of the so called gentrifiers are not sending their kids to their neighborhood public schools, in part because of charters and in part because of the release valve of Deal and Wilson? And if you got rid of those options you'd actually have diverse public schools EOTP?
Hi, welcome to DCUM. I'm sorry, but although you may feel your question is serious, you have clearly not seriously considered it.
Yep - they obviously don't have kids of their own, or they'd realize that without charters and the "release valve" of Deal and Wilson, those of us EOTP would take our high incomes (but not high enough for 2+ kids @$44k/year private) to the suburbs.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm not sure about the assumption that all the kids at feeders will move on to Wilson. At least in my Deal feeder neighborhood, it seems in the past twenty years to be moving from middle/upper middle class to more uniformly affluent. I wonder if more people will have the means to send their kids to private in the next decade or so, which would mean fewer kids move on to Deal/Hardy and Wilson, at least as a proportion of kids at each feeder. It may not completely relieve pressure, but perhaps mitigate some pressure. Just a thought.
All of the private schools have zoning caps on enrollment. So while the number of students in the area is steadily and significantly increasing, the number of private school seats is the same.
Anonymous wrote:I'm not sure about the assumption that all the kids at feeders will move on to Wilson. At least in my Deal feeder neighborhood, it seems in the past twenty years to be moving from middle/upper middle class to more uniformly affluent. I wonder if more people will have the means to send their kids to private in the next decade or so, which would mean fewer kids move on to Deal/Hardy and Wilson, at least as a proportion of kids at each feeder. It may not completely relieve pressure, but perhaps mitigate some pressure. Just a thought.
Anonymous wrote:I'm not sure about the assumption that all the kids at feeders will move on to Wilson. At least in my Deal feeder neighborhood, it seems in the past twenty years to be moving from middle/upper middle class to more uniformly affluent. I wonder if more people will have the means to send their kids to private in the next decade or so, which would mean fewer kids move on to Deal/Hardy and Wilson, at least as a proportion of kids at each feeder. It may not completely relieve pressure, but perhaps mitigate some pressure. Just a thought.
Anonymous wrote:Stop complaining about this.
Everyone knows it is over-enrolled. It has been for a while and probably was when most of you purchased your homes or had your children.
It isn’t going to be addressed - aside from portables - until the next boundary review, which is 5 years away. That’s well before the projection mentioned in the master facilities plan takes effect.
If you don’t like it you can apply to another school via the lottery (how people in the rest of the city respond if they don’t like their IB school), apply to private school or move.
I almost think this topic continues to be posted by someone on a Russian troll farm. It certainly brings out every nasty, divisive instinct of people in this city, and isn’t it funny how no one ever says that their house or ES should be rezobed. It is always someone else.