Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I roll my eyes when parents come to DCUM to post about how quickly any particular public school will go from primarily serving low SES students to high SES.
The reality is that most parents will vote with their feet for many years before this happens, if it ever happens.
DCI at risk is only 19% and last year they only moved 18 spots out of 340 on their Spanish waitlist (similar to Latin) so both of your points of low SES and families leaving are wrong by DC standards.
It was so much easier to understand school demographics when FARMs was the operative term for low SES kids. It's true that DCI doesn't have many homeless kids and very poor families. But it's attracts plenty of lower middle-class minority kids who just aren't equipped to keep up with the mostly white and Asian children of uber-educated UMC parents. That's the elephant in the room.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I roll my eyes when parents come to DCUM to post about how quickly any particular public school will go from primarily serving low SES students to high SES.
The reality is that most parents will vote with their feet for many years before this happens, if it ever happens.
DCI at risk is only 19% and last year they only moved 18 spots out of 340 on their Spanish waitlist (similar to Latin) so both of your points of low SES and families leaving are wrong by DC standards.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I roll my eyes when parents come to DCUM to post about how quickly any particular public school will go from primarily serving low SES students to high SES.
The reality is that most parents will vote with their feet for many years before this happens, if it ever happens.
DCI at risk is only 19% and last year they only moved 18 spots out of 340 on their Spanish waitlist (similar to Latin) so both of your points of low SES and families leaving are wrong by DC standards.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I roll my eyes when parents come to DCUM to post about how quickly any particular public school will go from primarily serving low SES students to high SES.
The reality is that most parents will vote with their feet for many years before this happens, if it ever happens.
DCI at risk is only 19% and last year they only moved 18 spots out of 340 on their Spanish waitlist (similar to Latin) so both of your points of low SES and families leaving are wrong by DC standards.
Anonymous wrote:I roll my eyes when parents come to DCUM to post about how quickly any particular public school will go from primarily serving low SES students to high SES.
The reality is that most parents will vote with their feet for many years before this happens, if it ever happens.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Maybe, but why should we believe that it will? It took Latin over a decade before most of the middle school families began to stay through high school.
Because the city has changed significantly compared to back then. It has gentrified very, very much. Much, much more competition from UMC families now for middle and high schools EOTP.
You can’t get anything renovated for less than 700-800k except for EOTR and few outlier areas close to the border.
Without a doubt, DCI is going to have a lot of UMC families who will go there.
I’m laughing at all the people who post that it’s not rigorous enough. Guess they have not figured out that no DCPS or charter school is rigorous enough to track the highest performing kids. Maybe Basis, but that school only works for a certain subset of high performing kids, not all. It’s all about peer groups people.
Anonymous wrote:For the DCI graduates reading this post...bravo! Congratulations! Your community is proud of you. Keep striving.
Anonymous wrote:Maybe, but why should we believe that it will? It took Latin over a decade before most of the middle school families began to stay through high school.
Anonymous wrote:This exact conversation took place about Latin's first graduating class and it was just as ugly.