Anonymous wrote:LAMB
Anonymous wrote:Counter-narrative to "rich white schools" succeeded: Whittier offered seats to all students PK4 and up, four days a week. By May there were 150 kids attending daily.
We couldn't get enough PK3 to come back to avoid simulcasting, which would have been a disaster, so we had in-person pop-ups where kids and teachers met up for a few hours every few weeks to play games, do crafts, and learn social skills.
Communication was as good as it could be given the shifting winds of DCPS Central Office, including weekly Zoom with the principal for parents with any questions or concerns. Overall, I was really impressed with how resilient and creative the administration and staff have been throughout.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is a weird question.
DC is an extreme, extreme outlier nationally in its slowness in getting kids back in the classroom. Maybe the only place in the U.S. that did worse than DC was San Francisco.
And we're asking who excelled?
Daycares excelled. Private schools excelled. *All* other schools in DC failed miserably.
Perhaps, but whose whose fault was that?
Principals striving to reopen broadly and efficiently could only accomplish so much without strong support and clear directives from the top. I'm under the impression that admins, teachers and families at a DCSP ES EotP did their utmost to get all the kids back as soon as possible. However, they were largely stymied by weak support from the Chancellor, the Mayor, the city council and the WTU to do any better. They were also hamstrung by poor top-down plant/facilities management planning over the years. How many kids could our school's leaders bring back to a building that was at around 150% over capacity pre-pandemic per CDC guidelines re social distancing?
Pretty clearly, the school didn't fail us; the mismanaged system did in the usual toxic political environment.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is a weird question.
DC is an extreme, extreme outlier nationally in its slowness in getting kids back in the classroom. Maybe the only place in the U.S. that did worse than DC was San Francisco.
And we're asking who excelled?
Daycares excelled. Private schools excelled. *All* other schools in DC failed miserably.
Anonymous wrote:Seaton
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is a weird question.
DC is an extreme, extreme outlier nationally in its slowness in getting kids back in the classroom. Maybe the only place in the U.S. that did worse than DC was San Francisco.
And we're asking who excelled?
Daycares excelled. Private schools excelled. *All* other schools in DC failed miserably.
Anonymous wrote:This is a weird question.
DC is an extreme, extreme outlier nationally in its slowness in getting kids back in the classroom. Maybe the only place in the U.S. that did worse than DC was San Francisco.
And we're asking who excelled?
Anonymous wrote:This is a weird question.
DC is an extreme, extreme outlier nationally in its slowness in getting kids back in the classroom. Maybe the only place in the U.S. that did worse than DC was San Francisco.
And we're asking who excelled?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Lafayette got everyone back. That was huge.
Everyone, as in not a single person left out? That is impressive. I think they win.
Everyone who wanted a space. There were some grades - K I think -- that took longer, but I believe everyone who wanted to had a spot in the end.
Murch got everyone back too.
Anonymous wrote:This is a weird question.
DC is an extreme, extreme outlier nationally in its slowness in getting kids back in the classroom. Maybe the only place in the U.S. that did worse than DC was San Francisco.
And we're asking who excelled?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Lafayette got everyone back. That was huge.
Everyone, as in not a single person left out? That is impressive. I think they win.
Everyone who wanted a space. There were some grades - K I think -- that took longer, but I believe everyone who wanted to had a spot in the end.
Murch got everyone back too.