Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Doesn’t she belong to St Anthony’s Catholic Church,
where they have a school?
And?
Not always, but Catholics typically send their child to the school of their parish.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I did not know the chancellors kid isn’t in his IB, that McDuffie send his kids to private, and White wouldn’t answer the question when the Post asked.
And there you have, hypocrisy and “equity for all” in the highest regard on display.
Anonymous wrote:I did not know the chancellors kid isn’t in his IB, that McDuffie send his kids to private, and White wouldn’t answer the question when the Post asked.
Anonymous wrote:A few quotes from the WaPo article:
Here's a few quotes from the WaPo article:
“I am trying to figure out who she is going to be,” Bowser said. “Right now, I would like her to go to our neighborhood school.”
Also:
"If Miranda does enroll in Shepherd, Bowser would be the city’s first elected mayor to send her child to an assigned neighborhood school.
“I would rather not spend an hour commuting,” Bowser said. “I want her to have friends in the neighborhood; I want her to be close to home, and if that school is right for her, that is probably where she is going.”
https://www.washingtonpost.com/local/education/where-will-dcs-first-toddler-attend-school-mayor-bowser-says-her-daughter-will-stay-hyperlocal/2020/01/28/aedd177a-41ff-11ea-aa6a-083d01b3ed18_story.html
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:"I want her to have friends in the neighborhood and I want her to be close to home"
Shepherd is only 53% in-boundary. I guess she'll have a few friends in the neighborhood.
PK3 and PK4 are 100% IB, with even IB families waitlisted at the time of lottery for PK3. Can't wait to see her at the PTA meetings![]()
As more families stay in DC longer into school age, the charter system gets tighter to get into, and people are looking for a solid plan through MS and HS, we've seen a steady increase in IB numbers over the past several years at Shepherd.
Many DCPS schools are overwhelmingly or all IB for ECE. The real marker of family buy in is the upper grades. So 53% IB for Shepherd means the upper grades is likely more towards the 30% because the ECE of 100% skews the number to look better at 53% than it is.
So sure the trend is up but still not good enough numbers where you can say most families send their kids to Shepherd.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:"I want her to have friends in the neighborhood and I want her to be close to home"
Shepherd is only 53% in-boundary. I guess she'll have a few friends in the neighborhood.
PK3 and PK4 are 100% IB, with even IB families waitlisted at the time of lottery for PK3. Can't wait to see her at the PTA meetings![]()
As more families stay in DC longer into school age, the charter system gets tighter to get into, and people are looking for a solid plan through MS and HS, we've seen a steady increase in IB numbers over the past several years at Shepherd.
Anonymous wrote:That's unfair snark.
She's the parent of a 2 yo. At that point, no one knows what school their kids will attend down the road.
One of my kids turned out to have significant learning disabilities that were invisible when they were that age, and all of our ideas about schools and more were upended.
Anonymous wrote:Does anyone think Bowser won't win the pre-K3 lottery for her kid?
I mean, they have to rig it for her, right? Does the Mayor get a special dispensation in the lottery?
Anonymous wrote:What she means is that her daughter will be at Shepherd for the free pre-K, but no promises on what happens in the later years.
It's not hard to read between the lines.