Anonymous wrote:What I've learned is that DCI parents are at the peak point of boosterism and they will trash all the other options (Walls, Latin and BASIS) to justify the choice or maybe keep people at DCI rather than moving to "build a cohort."
Why can't all four of those high schools be good options?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sweeping statement bearing little relationship to reality. Who cares about CAPE scores at DCI when middle school kids can take advanced math and get grouped in science and social studies classes with high achievers? In the high school, classes are tracked. We can't afford a private, didn't get into BASIS or a Latin and don't want to move, so we make the best of the situation.
If the classes are tracked, and you have a big enough cohort to stay advanced, then I agree, CAPE scores are irrelevant.
Bingo.
I would also add that you need to compare apples to apples.
As said in this thread, DCI has 20 times more ELL and SPED. If Latin had similar kids, numbers would be very different
Apples to apples, you say? Do you always just make sh*t up?
1. There are not lots more SPEDs at DCI than Latin. Not sure why you think DCI would attract more SPEDs than Latin. Plus, don't SPED kids typically get extra time on CAPE? Why would you think that there are lots more at DCI than Latin, and why do you think that they do worse on standardized tests with accommodations?
2. There are more ELL at DCI than Latin for obvious reasons. However, there are about 4 or 5 times more ELL at DCI, not 20 times as you claim. Moreover, if you look at ACCESS test results, the ELL at Latin do better than DCI. In the last testing cycle, 17% of ELL at Latin tested proficient compared to 5% at DCI. So, Latin does a better job teaching English to ELL than DCI.
3. Hopefully, kids at DCI speak pretty good English by 10th grade. However, if you look at CAPE results for 10th grade, 63.8% of DCI students are below grade level in ELA.
4. Looking at math in 10th grade, 93.7% of DCI students are below grade level in math. And math doesn't require English fluency.
What is this crazy word salad? DCI does have more English learners, more at risk students and more special ed students. I don’t think that makes it easier for them to do well on the CAPE or whatever.
Not sure where this insecurity is coming from. If you’re happy at Latin relax.
+1. I’m the PP above and that 20 times was an error. That data was for Walls. But yes, DCI has significantly more SPED and ELL than Latin. The data is there in the DC report card as my source.
You sound ignorant about SPED. Just because some have time accommodations on testing does not make it an even playing field for all SPED students and miraculously they perform just as well as a non-SPED kid. Please educate yourself.
CAPE is not the best test to assess a school if there is tracking as another poster above pointed out. I would argue you should look at SAT results and you will see that DCI and Latin are similar although DCI has significantly more ELL and SPED.
DCI boosters never give up. Just keep making excuses!
lol
+1. Seems to be a cult.
So 2 posters above can’t refute facts and so call people posting a booster. Lots of credibility in your statements.
Here are actual numbers and data. I have averaged out the middle and high school for Latin since DCI is not broken down into middle and high school
LATIN
ELL 8.5%
SPED 13%
DCI
ELL 20.8%
SPED 20.5%
So DCI has whooping 2.5 times more ELL and 60% more SPED.
Now let’s look also to at risk LATIN 10%, DCI 17.2%., so about 70% more.
Yet SAT scores both scores pretty similar. Looks to me like DCI has much tougher study body to educate and doing just as well.
Lastly if kids are taking AP Calculus as early as 10th grade then I would not rely on math CAPE. You have small group of 10th graders, larger group of 11th graders, and even larger group of 12th graders who might not be taking CAPE at all. This has been discussed numerous times that if a school offers very advance math, then CAPE is not truly reflective of the student body since many kids are not taking it.
This is all fine, but the post is about DCI and Walls. Not sure why we need this Latin info. DCI and Latin are completely different schools and will attract different types of kids. But again, this info is not helpful to OP since they asked about DCI and Wallls. There are a lot of very defensive DCI posters here.
Why would you say DCI and Latin attract different types of kids? The schools aren’t clones, but the kids aren’t that different. We just picked Latin over DCI and it was a difficult choice.
DCI and Latin are very different schools with very different course offerings, extracurriculars and educational models. DCI is a lot bigger and relies on tech a lot. Not all kids can handle that or families want that. My oldest is at DCI middle and it felt very sink or swim which is fine for kids that can handle it. We would have chosen Latin if they had gotten a spot because it would have been a better fit for our kid.
NP. DCI isn’t that big. There is 200-260 kids in each grade so 600-700 kids in the middle school.
The 2 families I know that chose Latin over DCI was because their kid needed a small school and more teacher attention due to various reasons.
We chose DCI over Latin because there much more course offerings, more tracking, more advance language offerings, and more EC, clubs, and sport offerings. The facilities is also much better.
In addition, we really like the IB diploma option and opportunities for colleges abroad.
Ok, well, Latin barely takes anyone off their massive waitlist because so few people turn them down. It’s surprising and seems statistically unlikely that you would know of three examples.
Yes there is 3 of us. I turned it down so prove that the waitlist moved. Just because you know no one doesn’t mean that other people can’t know someone.
Yes, people with options turn them down. The people who don’t have options don’t.
That is the point of this whole thread and discussion is feeder families and families at DCI have options and are considering such, if that is Walls, Latin, or whatever school.
If that doesn’t pertain to you, feel free to move on.
You're not very good at lying.
I don’t understand why you’re so aggressive about this.
I suspect you’re one of the parents of the kids at our immersion charter who frankly could not learn the target language and fled to Latin where they didn’t have to struggle anymore. Calm down some kids aren’t good at foreign languages. Stop being so hostile and defensive. Latin is a fine school.
This is so ridiculous I'm assuming you're just a troll.
No the kids who couldn’t cut it because they couldn’t learn the language all tried for Latin or a better dcps. You sound so defensive I assume you’re one of those parents.
You’re really selling Latin with your horrible and mean comments about actual children btw.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sweeping statement bearing little relationship to reality. Who cares about CAPE scores at DCI when middle school kids can take advanced math and get grouped in science and social studies classes with high achievers? In the high school, classes are tracked. We can't afford a private, didn't get into BASIS or a Latin and don't want to move, so we make the best of the situation.
If the classes are tracked, and you have a big enough cohort to stay advanced, then I agree, CAPE scores are irrelevant.
Bingo.
I would also add that you need to compare apples to apples.
As said in this thread, DCI has 20 times more ELL and SPED. If Latin had similar kids, numbers would be very different
Apples to apples, you say? Do you always just make sh*t up?
1. There are not lots more SPEDs at DCI than Latin. Not sure why you think DCI would attract more SPEDs than Latin. Plus, don't SPED kids typically get extra time on CAPE? Why would you think that there are lots more at DCI than Latin, and why do you think that they do worse on standardized tests with accommodations?
2. There are more ELL at DCI than Latin for obvious reasons. However, there are about 4 or 5 times more ELL at DCI, not 20 times as you claim. Moreover, if you look at ACCESS test results, the ELL at Latin do better than DCI. In the last testing cycle, 17% of ELL at Latin tested proficient compared to 5% at DCI. So, Latin does a better job teaching English to ELL than DCI.
3. Hopefully, kids at DCI speak pretty good English by 10th grade. However, if you look at CAPE results for 10th grade, 63.8% of DCI students are below grade level in ELA.
4. Looking at math in 10th grade, 93.7% of DCI students are below grade level in math. And math doesn't require English fluency.
What is this crazy word salad? DCI does have more English learners, more at risk students and more special ed students. I don’t think that makes it easier for them to do well on the CAPE or whatever.
Not sure where this insecurity is coming from. If you’re happy at Latin relax.
+1. I’m the PP above and that 20 times was an error. That data was for Walls. But yes, DCI has significantly more SPED and ELL than Latin. The data is there in the DC report card as my source.
You sound ignorant about SPED. Just because some have time accommodations on testing does not make it an even playing field for all SPED students and miraculously they perform just as well as a non-SPED kid. Please educate yourself.
CAPE is not the best test to assess a school if there is tracking as another poster above pointed out. I would argue you should look at SAT results and you will see that DCI and Latin are similar although DCI has significantly more ELL and SPED.
DCI boosters never give up. Just keep making excuses!
lol
+1. Seems to be a cult.
So 2 posters above can’t refute facts and so call people posting a booster. Lots of credibility in your statements.
Here are actual numbers and data. I have averaged out the middle and high school for Latin since DCI is not broken down into middle and high school
LATIN
ELL 8.5%
SPED 13%
DCI
ELL 20.8%
SPED 20.5%
So DCI has whooping 2.5 times more ELL and 60% more SPED.
Now let’s look also to at risk LATIN 10%, DCI 17.2%., so about 70% more.
Yet SAT scores both scores pretty similar. Looks to me like DCI has much tougher study body to educate and doing just as well.
Lastly if kids are taking AP Calculus as early as 10th grade then I would not rely on math CAPE. You have small group of 10th graders, larger group of 11th graders, and even larger group of 12th graders who might not be taking CAPE at all. This has been discussed numerous times that if a school offers very advance math, then CAPE is not truly reflective of the student body since many kids are not taking it.
This is all fine, but the post is about DCI and Walls. Not sure why we need this Latin info. DCI and Latin are completely different schools and will attract different types of kids. But again, this info is not helpful to OP since they asked about DCI and Wallls. There are a lot of very defensive DCI posters here.
Why would you say DCI and Latin attract different types of kids? The schools aren’t clones, but the kids aren’t that different. We just picked Latin over DCI and it was a difficult choice.
DCI and Latin are very different schools with very different course offerings, extracurriculars and educational models. DCI is a lot bigger and relies on tech a lot. Not all kids can handle that or families want that. My oldest is at DCI middle and it felt very sink or swim which is fine for kids that can handle it. We would have chosen Latin if they had gotten a spot because it would have been a better fit for our kid.
NP. DCI isn’t that big. There is 200-260 kids in each grade so 600-700 kids in the middle school.
The 2 families I know that chose Latin over DCI was because their kid needed a small school and more teacher attention due to various reasons.
We chose DCI over Latin because there much more course offerings, more tracking, more advance language offerings, and more EC, clubs, and sport offerings. The facilities is also much better.
In addition, we really like the IB diploma option and opportunities for colleges abroad.
Ok, well, Latin barely takes anyone off their massive waitlist because so few people turn them down. It’s surprising and seems statistically unlikely that you would know of three examples.
Yes there is 3 of us. I turned it down so prove that the waitlist moved. Just because you know no one doesn’t mean that other people can’t know someone.
Yes, people with options turn them down. The people who don’t have options don’t.
That is the point of this whole thread and discussion is feeder families and families at DCI have options and are considering such, if that is Walls, Latin, or whatever school.
If that doesn’t pertain to you, feel free to move on.
You're not very good at lying.
PP here. Not lying at all. Doesn’t matter to me if you don’t want to believe the truth.
But hey, feel free to be in your echo chamber of denial……
LOL. There's 501 kids on the waitlist for fifth grade at Latin 2nd Street. That's for 71 seats. Show me another school in DC that has seven kids on the waitlist for every available seat. This year, Latin has made a grand total of five waitlist offers.
You are such a loser. Imagine going so hard for a mediocre middle school. I bet people in Bethesda or nova are laughing at you. I am and I think Latin is a decent option. Calm down.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sweeping statement bearing little relationship to reality. Who cares about CAPE scores at DCI when middle school kids can take advanced math and get grouped in science and social studies classes with high achievers? In the high school, classes are tracked. We can't afford a private, didn't get into BASIS or a Latin and don't want to move, so we make the best of the situation.
If the classes are tracked, and you have a big enough cohort to stay advanced, then I agree, CAPE scores are irrelevant.
Bingo.
I would also add that you need to compare apples to apples.
As said in this thread, DCI has 20 times more ELL and SPED. If Latin had similar kids, numbers would be very different
Apples to apples, you say? Do you always just make sh*t up?
1. There are not lots more SPEDs at DCI than Latin. Not sure why you think DCI would attract more SPEDs than Latin. Plus, don't SPED kids typically get extra time on CAPE? Why would you think that there are lots more at DCI than Latin, and why do you think that they do worse on standardized tests with accommodations?
2. There are more ELL at DCI than Latin for obvious reasons. However, there are about 4 or 5 times more ELL at DCI, not 20 times as you claim. Moreover, if you look at ACCESS test results, the ELL at Latin do better than DCI. In the last testing cycle, 17% of ELL at Latin tested proficient compared to 5% at DCI. So, Latin does a better job teaching English to ELL than DCI.
3. Hopefully, kids at DCI speak pretty good English by 10th grade. However, if you look at CAPE results for 10th grade, 63.8% of DCI students are below grade level in ELA.
4. Looking at math in 10th grade, 93.7% of DCI students are below grade level in math. And math doesn't require English fluency.
What is this crazy word salad? DCI does have more English learners, more at risk students and more special ed students. I don’t think that makes it easier for them to do well on the CAPE or whatever.
Not sure where this insecurity is coming from. If you’re happy at Latin relax.
+1. I’m the PP above and that 20 times was an error. That data was for Walls. But yes, DCI has significantly more SPED and ELL than Latin. The data is there in the DC report card as my source.
You sound ignorant about SPED. Just because some have time accommodations on testing does not make it an even playing field for all SPED students and miraculously they perform just as well as a non-SPED kid. Please educate yourself.
CAPE is not the best test to assess a school if there is tracking as another poster above pointed out. I would argue you should look at SAT results and you will see that DCI and Latin are similar although DCI has significantly more ELL and SPED.
DCI boosters never give up. Just keep making excuses!
lol
+1. Seems to be a cult.
So 2 posters above can’t refute facts and so call people posting a booster. Lots of credibility in your statements.
Here are actual numbers and data. I have averaged out the middle and high school for Latin since DCI is not broken down into middle and high school
LATIN
ELL 8.5%
SPED 13%
DCI
ELL 20.8%
SPED 20.5%
So DCI has whooping 2.5 times more ELL and 60% more SPED.
Now let’s look also to at risk LATIN 10%, DCI 17.2%., so about 70% more.
Yet SAT scores both scores pretty similar. Looks to me like DCI has much tougher study body to educate and doing just as well.
Lastly if kids are taking AP Calculus as early as 10th grade then I would not rely on math CAPE. You have small group of 10th graders, larger group of 11th graders, and even larger group of 12th graders who might not be taking CAPE at all. This has been discussed numerous times that if a school offers very advance math, then CAPE is not truly reflective of the student body since many kids are not taking it.
This is all fine, but the post is about DCI and Walls. Not sure why we need this Latin info. DCI and Latin are completely different schools and will attract different types of kids. But again, this info is not helpful to OP since they asked about DCI and Wallls. There are a lot of very defensive DCI posters here.
Why would you say DCI and Latin attract different types of kids? The schools aren’t clones, but the kids aren’t that different. We just picked Latin over DCI and it was a difficult choice.
DCI and Latin are very different schools with very different course offerings, extracurriculars and educational models. DCI is a lot bigger and relies on tech a lot. Not all kids can handle that or families want that. My oldest is at DCI middle and it felt very sink or swim which is fine for kids that can handle it. We would have chosen Latin if they had gotten a spot because it would have been a better fit for our kid.
NP. DCI isn’t that big. There is 200-260 kids in each grade so 600-700 kids in the middle school.
The 2 families I know that chose Latin over DCI was because their kid needed a small school and more teacher attention due to various reasons.
We chose DCI over Latin because there much more course offerings, more tracking, more advance language offerings, and more EC, clubs, and sport offerings. The facilities is also much better.
In addition, we really like the IB diploma option and opportunities for colleges abroad.
Ok, well, Latin barely takes anyone off their massive waitlist because so few people turn them down. It’s surprising and seems statistically unlikely that you would know of three examples.
Yes there is 3 of us. I turned it down so prove that the waitlist moved. Just because you know no one doesn’t mean that other people can’t know someone.
Yes, people with options turn them down. The people who don’t have options don’t.
That is the point of this whole thread and discussion is feeder families and families at DCI have options and are considering such, if that is Walls, Latin, or whatever school.
If that doesn’t pertain to you, feel free to move on.
You're not very good at lying.
I don’t understand why you’re so aggressive about this.
I suspect you’re one of the parents of the kids at our immersion charter who frankly could not learn the target language and fled to Latin where they didn’t have to struggle anymore. Calm down some kids aren’t good at foreign languages. Stop being so hostile and defensive. Latin is a fine school.
This is so ridiculous I'm assuming you're just a troll.
No the kids who couldn’t cut it because they couldn’t learn the language all tried for Latin or a better dcps. You sound so defensive I assume you’re one of those parents.
You’re really selling Latin with your horrible and mean comments about actual children btw.
You are essentially calling immersion kids who choose Latin failures. Saying things like they “couldn’t cut it” is also not nice. People pick schools like Stokes, MV and DCB for other reasons and are not super invested in bilingualism. I don’t think anyone is trying to “sell” Latin with horrible comments. Most of them just point out that people make different choices for their kids. This back and forth comparing schools that are very different isn’t helpful.
Well it isn’t helpful to keep a kid who is totally miserable in immersion there. They were unable to learn a foreign language and were thrilled Latin had a very mediocre foreign language program. Sorry if that hurts your feelings.
By the way I also know people who got into Latin and were happy with immersion but liked the small class sizes and the lack of stem and happily switched.
I also know people who left Latin for Walls and got into great colleges. I know people who stayed at Latin and got into great colleges. And the same applies to DCI.
My feelings are not hurt. I agree with you about most of this. I was responding to your comment that some of the responses are not nice. Then you proceed to use negative language about other kids. That’s all. I have commented several times on this thread that people make the best choices for their family based on options and family values. DCI, Walls, Latin and many others are all great options.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sweeping statement bearing little relationship to reality. Who cares about CAPE scores at DCI when middle school kids can take advanced math and get grouped in science and social studies classes with high achievers? In the high school, classes are tracked. We can't afford a private, didn't get into BASIS or a Latin and don't want to move, so we make the best of the situation.
If the classes are tracked, and you have a big enough cohort to stay advanced, then I agree, CAPE scores are irrelevant.
Bingo.
I would also add that you need to compare apples to apples.
As said in this thread, DCI has 20 times more ELL and SPED. If Latin had similar kids, numbers would be very different
Apples to apples, you say? Do you always just make sh*t up?
1. There are not lots more SPEDs at DCI than Latin. Not sure why you think DCI would attract more SPEDs than Latin. Plus, don't SPED kids typically get extra time on CAPE? Why would you think that there are lots more at DCI than Latin, and why do you think that they do worse on standardized tests with accommodations?
2. There are more ELL at DCI than Latin for obvious reasons. However, there are about 4 or 5 times more ELL at DCI, not 20 times as you claim. Moreover, if you look at ACCESS test results, the ELL at Latin do better than DCI. In the last testing cycle, 17% of ELL at Latin tested proficient compared to 5% at DCI. So, Latin does a better job teaching English to ELL than DCI.
3. Hopefully, kids at DCI speak pretty good English by 10th grade. However, if you look at CAPE results for 10th grade, 63.8% of DCI students are below grade level in ELA.
4. Looking at math in 10th grade, 93.7% of DCI students are below grade level in math. And math doesn't require English fluency.
What is this crazy word salad? DCI does have more English learners, more at risk students and more special ed students. I don’t think that makes it easier for them to do well on the CAPE or whatever.
Not sure where this insecurity is coming from. If you’re happy at Latin relax.
+1. I’m the PP above and that 20 times was an error. That data was for Walls. But yes, DCI has significantly more SPED and ELL than Latin. The data is there in the DC report card as my source.
You sound ignorant about SPED. Just because some have time accommodations on testing does not make it an even playing field for all SPED students and miraculously they perform just as well as a non-SPED kid. Please educate yourself.
CAPE is not the best test to assess a school if there is tracking as another poster above pointed out. I would argue you should look at SAT results and you will see that DCI and Latin are similar although DCI has significantly more ELL and SPED.
DCI boosters never give up. Just keep making excuses!
lol
+1. Seems to be a cult.
So 2 posters above can’t refute facts and so call people posting a booster. Lots of credibility in your statements.
Here are actual numbers and data. I have averaged out the middle and high school for Latin since DCI is not broken down into middle and high school
LATIN
ELL 8.5%
SPED 13%
DCI
ELL 20.8%
SPED 20.5%
So DCI has whooping 2.5 times more ELL and 60% more SPED.
Now let’s look also to at risk LATIN 10%, DCI 17.2%., so about 70% more.
Yet SAT scores both scores pretty similar. Looks to me like DCI has much tougher study body to educate and doing just as well.
Lastly if kids are taking AP Calculus as early as 10th grade then I would not rely on math CAPE. You have small group of 10th graders, larger group of 11th graders, and even larger group of 12th graders who might not be taking CAPE at all. This has been discussed numerous times that if a school offers very advance math, then CAPE is not truly reflective of the student body since many kids are not taking it.
This is all fine, but the post is about DCI and Walls. Not sure why we need this Latin info. DCI and Latin are completely different schools and will attract different types of kids. But again, this info is not helpful to OP since they asked about DCI and Wallls. There are a lot of very defensive DCI posters here.
Why would you say DCI and Latin attract different types of kids? The schools aren’t clones, but the kids aren’t that different. We just picked Latin over DCI and it was a difficult choice.
DCI and Latin are very different schools with very different course offerings, extracurriculars and educational models. DCI is a lot bigger and relies on tech a lot. Not all kids can handle that or families want that. My oldest is at DCI middle and it felt very sink or swim which is fine for kids that can handle it. We would have chosen Latin if they had gotten a spot because it would have been a better fit for our kid.
NP. DCI isn’t that big. There is 200-260 kids in each grade so 600-700 kids in the middle school.
The 2 families I know that chose Latin over DCI was because their kid needed a small school and more teacher attention due to various reasons.
We chose DCI over Latin because there much more course offerings, more tracking, more advance language offerings, and more EC, clubs, and sport offerings. The facilities is also much better.
In addition, we really like the IB diploma option and opportunities for colleges abroad.
Ok, well, Latin barely takes anyone off their massive waitlist because so few people turn them down. It’s surprising and seems statistically unlikely that you would know of three examples.
Yes there is 3 of us. I turned it down so prove that the waitlist moved. Just because you know no one doesn’t mean that other people can’t know someone.
Yes, people with options turn them down. The people who don’t have options don’t.
That is the point of this whole thread and discussion is feeder families and families at DCI have options and are considering such, if that is Walls, Latin, or whatever school.
If that doesn’t pertain to you, feel free to move on.
You're not very good at lying.
PP here. Not lying at all. Doesn’t matter to me if you don’t want to believe the truth.
But hey, feel free to be in your echo chamber of denial……
LOL. There's 501 kids on the waitlist for fifth grade at Latin 2nd Street. That's for 71 seats. Show me another school in DC that has seven kids on the waitlist for every available seat. This year, Latin has made a grand total of five waitlist offers.
You are such a loser. Imagine going so hard for a mediocre middle school. I bet people in Bethesda or nova are laughing at you. I am and I think Latin is a decent option. Calm down.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sweeping statement bearing little relationship to reality. Who cares about CAPE scores at DCI when middle school kids can take advanced math and get grouped in science and social studies classes with high achievers? In the high school, classes are tracked. We can't afford a private, didn't get into BASIS or a Latin and don't want to move, so we make the best of the situation.
If the classes are tracked, and you have a big enough cohort to stay advanced, then I agree, CAPE scores are irrelevant.
Bingo.
I would also add that you need to compare apples to apples.
As said in this thread, DCI has 20 times more ELL and SPED. If Latin had similar kids, numbers would be very different
Apples to apples, you say? Do you always just make sh*t up?
1. There are not lots more SPEDs at DCI than Latin. Not sure why you think DCI would attract more SPEDs than Latin. Plus, don't SPED kids typically get extra time on CAPE? Why would you think that there are lots more at DCI than Latin, and why do you think that they do worse on standardized tests with accommodations?
2. There are more ELL at DCI than Latin for obvious reasons. However, there are about 4 or 5 times more ELL at DCI, not 20 times as you claim. Moreover, if you look at ACCESS test results, the ELL at Latin do better than DCI. In the last testing cycle, 17% of ELL at Latin tested proficient compared to 5% at DCI. So, Latin does a better job teaching English to ELL than DCI.
3. Hopefully, kids at DCI speak pretty good English by 10th grade. However, if you look at CAPE results for 10th grade, 63.8% of DCI students are below grade level in ELA.
4. Looking at math in 10th grade, 93.7% of DCI students are below grade level in math. And math doesn't require English fluency.
What is this crazy word salad? DCI does have more English learners, more at risk students and more special ed students. I don’t think that makes it easier for them to do well on the CAPE or whatever.
Not sure where this insecurity is coming from. If you’re happy at Latin relax.
+1. I’m the PP above and that 20 times was an error. That data was for Walls. But yes, DCI has significantly more SPED and ELL than Latin. The data is there in the DC report card as my source.
You sound ignorant about SPED. Just because some have time accommodations on testing does not make it an even playing field for all SPED students and miraculously they perform just as well as a non-SPED kid. Please educate yourself.
CAPE is not the best test to assess a school if there is tracking as another poster above pointed out. I would argue you should look at SAT results and you will see that DCI and Latin are similar although DCI has significantly more ELL and SPED.
DCI boosters never give up. Just keep making excuses!
lol
+1. Seems to be a cult.
So 2 posters above can’t refute facts and so call people posting a booster. Lots of credibility in your statements.
Here are actual numbers and data. I have averaged out the middle and high school for Latin since DCI is not broken down into middle and high school
LATIN
ELL 8.5%
SPED 13%
DCI
ELL 20.8%
SPED 20.5%
So DCI has whooping 2.5 times more ELL and 60% more SPED.
Now let’s look also to at risk LATIN 10%, DCI 17.2%., so about 70% more.
Yet SAT scores both scores pretty similar. Looks to me like DCI has much tougher study body to educate and doing just as well.
Lastly if kids are taking AP Calculus as early as 10th grade then I would not rely on math CAPE. You have small group of 10th graders, larger group of 11th graders, and even larger group of 12th graders who might not be taking CAPE at all. This has been discussed numerous times that if a school offers very advance math, then CAPE is not truly reflective of the student body since many kids are not taking it.
This is all fine, but the post is about DCI and Walls. Not sure why we need this Latin info. DCI and Latin are completely different schools and will attract different types of kids. But again, this info is not helpful to OP since they asked about DCI and Wallls. There are a lot of very defensive DCI posters here.
Why would you say DCI and Latin attract different types of kids? The schools aren’t clones, but the kids aren’t that different. We just picked Latin over DCI and it was a difficult choice.
DCI and Latin are very different schools with very different course offerings, extracurriculars and educational models. DCI is a lot bigger and relies on tech a lot. Not all kids can handle that or families want that. My oldest is at DCI middle and it felt very sink or swim which is fine for kids that can handle it. We would have chosen Latin if they had gotten a spot because it would have been a better fit for our kid.
NP. DCI isn’t that big. There is 200-260 kids in each grade so 600-700 kids in the middle school.
The 2 families I know that chose Latin over DCI was because their kid needed a small school and more teacher attention due to various reasons.
We chose DCI over Latin because there much more course offerings, more tracking, more advance language offerings, and more EC, clubs, and sport offerings. The facilities is also much better.
In addition, we really like the IB diploma option and opportunities for colleges abroad.
Ok, well, Latin barely takes anyone off their massive waitlist because so few people turn them down. It’s surprising and seems statistically unlikely that you would know of three examples.
Yes there is 3 of us. I turned it down so prove that the waitlist moved. Just because you know no one doesn’t mean that other people can’t know someone.
Yes, people with options turn them down. The people who don’t have options don’t.
That is the point of this whole thread and discussion is feeder families and families at DCI have options and are considering such, if that is Walls, Latin, or whatever school.
If that doesn’t pertain to you, feel free to move on.
You're not very good at lying.
I don’t understand why you’re so aggressive about this.
I suspect you’re one of the parents of the kids at our immersion charter who frankly could not learn the target language and fled to Latin where they didn’t have to struggle anymore. Calm down some kids aren’t good at foreign languages. Stop being so hostile and defensive. Latin is a fine school.
This is so ridiculous I'm assuming you're just a troll.
No the kids who couldn’t cut it because they couldn’t learn the language all tried for Latin or a better dcps. You sound so defensive I assume you’re one of those parents.
You’re really selling Latin with your horrible and mean comments about actual children btw.
You are essentially calling immersion kids who choose Latin failures. Saying things like they “couldn’t cut it” is also not nice. People pick schools like Stokes, MV and DCB for other reasons and are not super invested in bilingualism. I don’t think anyone is trying to “sell” Latin with horrible comments. Most of them just point out that people make different choices for their kids. This back and forth comparing schools that are very different isn’t helpful.
Well it isn’t helpful to keep a kid who is totally miserable in immersion there. They were unable to learn a foreign language and were thrilled Latin had a very mediocre foreign language program. Sorry if that hurts your feelings.
By the way I also know people who got into Latin and were happy with immersion but liked the small class sizes and the lack of stem and happily switched.
I also know people who left Latin for Walls and got into great colleges. I know people who stayed at Latin and got into great colleges. And the same applies to DCI.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sweeping statement bearing little relationship to reality. Who cares about CAPE scores at DCI when middle school kids can take advanced math and get grouped in science and social studies classes with high achievers? In the high school, classes are tracked. We can't afford a private, didn't get into BASIS or a Latin and don't want to move, so we make the best of the situation.
If the classes are tracked, and you have a big enough cohort to stay advanced, then I agree, CAPE scores are irrelevant.
Bingo.
I would also add that you need to compare apples to apples.
As said in this thread, DCI has 20 times more ELL and SPED. If Latin had similar kids, numbers would be very different
Apples to apples, you say? Do you always just make sh*t up?
1. There are not lots more SPEDs at DCI than Latin. Not sure why you think DCI would attract more SPEDs than Latin. Plus, don't SPED kids typically get extra time on CAPE? Why would you think that there are lots more at DCI than Latin, and why do you think that they do worse on standardized tests with accommodations?
2. There are more ELL at DCI than Latin for obvious reasons. However, there are about 4 or 5 times more ELL at DCI, not 20 times as you claim. Moreover, if you look at ACCESS test results, the ELL at Latin do better than DCI. In the last testing cycle, 17% of ELL at Latin tested proficient compared to 5% at DCI. So, Latin does a better job teaching English to ELL than DCI.
3. Hopefully, kids at DCI speak pretty good English by 10th grade. However, if you look at CAPE results for 10th grade, 63.8% of DCI students are below grade level in ELA.
4. Looking at math in 10th grade, 93.7% of DCI students are below grade level in math. And math doesn't require English fluency.
What is this crazy word salad? DCI does have more English learners, more at risk students and more special ed students. I don’t think that makes it easier for them to do well on the CAPE or whatever.
Not sure where this insecurity is coming from. If you’re happy at Latin relax.
+1. I’m the PP above and that 20 times was an error. That data was for Walls. But yes, DCI has significantly more SPED and ELL than Latin. The data is there in the DC report card as my source.
You sound ignorant about SPED. Just because some have time accommodations on testing does not make it an even playing field for all SPED students and miraculously they perform just as well as a non-SPED kid. Please educate yourself.
CAPE is not the best test to assess a school if there is tracking as another poster above pointed out. I would argue you should look at SAT results and you will see that DCI and Latin are similar although DCI has significantly more ELL and SPED.
DCI boosters never give up. Just keep making excuses!
lol
+1. Seems to be a cult.
So 2 posters above can’t refute facts and so call people posting a booster. Lots of credibility in your statements.
Here are actual numbers and data. I have averaged out the middle and high school for Latin since DCI is not broken down into middle and high school
LATIN
ELL 8.5%
SPED 13%
DCI
ELL 20.8%
SPED 20.5%
So DCI has whooping 2.5 times more ELL and 60% more SPED.
Now let’s look also to at risk LATIN 10%, DCI 17.2%., so about 70% more.
Yet SAT scores both scores pretty similar. Looks to me like DCI has much tougher study body to educate and doing just as well.
Lastly if kids are taking AP Calculus as early as 10th grade then I would not rely on math CAPE. You have small group of 10th graders, larger group of 11th graders, and even larger group of 12th graders who might not be taking CAPE at all. This has been discussed numerous times that if a school offers very advance math, then CAPE is not truly reflective of the student body since many kids are not taking it.
This is all fine, but the post is about DCI and Walls. Not sure why we need this Latin info. DCI and Latin are completely different schools and will attract different types of kids. But again, this info is not helpful to OP since they asked about DCI and Wallls. There are a lot of very defensive DCI posters here.
Why would you say DCI and Latin attract different types of kids? The schools aren’t clones, but the kids aren’t that different. We just picked Latin over DCI and it was a difficult choice.
DCI and Latin are very different schools with very different course offerings, extracurriculars and educational models. DCI is a lot bigger and relies on tech a lot. Not all kids can handle that or families want that. My oldest is at DCI middle and it felt very sink or swim which is fine for kids that can handle it. We would have chosen Latin if they had gotten a spot because it would have been a better fit for our kid.
NP. DCI isn’t that big. There is 200-260 kids in each grade so 600-700 kids in the middle school.
The 2 families I know that chose Latin over DCI was because their kid needed a small school and more teacher attention due to various reasons.
We chose DCI over Latin because there much more course offerings, more tracking, more advance language offerings, and more EC, clubs, and sport offerings. The facilities is also much better.
In addition, we really like the IB diploma option and opportunities for colleges abroad.
Ok, well, Latin barely takes anyone off their massive waitlist because so few people turn them down. It’s surprising and seems statistically unlikely that you would know of three examples.
Yes there is 3 of us. I turned it down so prove that the waitlist moved. Just because you know no one doesn’t mean that other people can’t know someone.
Yes, people with options turn them down. The people who don’t have options don’t.
That is the point of this whole thread and discussion is feeder families and families at DCI have options and are considering such, if that is Walls, Latin, or whatever school.
If that doesn’t pertain to you, feel free to move on.
You're not very good at lying.
I don’t understand why you’re so aggressive about this.
I suspect you’re one of the parents of the kids at our immersion charter who frankly could not learn the target language and fled to Latin where they didn’t have to struggle anymore. Calm down some kids aren’t good at foreign languages. Stop being so hostile and defensive. Latin is a fine school.
This is so ridiculous I'm assuming you're just a troll.
No the kids who couldn’t cut it because they couldn’t learn the language all tried for Latin or a better dcps. You sound so defensive I assume you’re one of those parents.
You’re really selling Latin with your horrible and mean comments about actual children btw.
You are essentially calling immersion kids who choose Latin failures. Saying things like they “couldn’t cut it” is also not nice. People pick schools like Stokes, MV and DCB for other reasons and are not super invested in bilingualism. I don’t think anyone is trying to “sell” Latin with horrible comments. Most of them just point out that people make different choices for their kids. This back and forth comparing schools that are very different isn’t helpful.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sweeping statement bearing little relationship to reality. Who cares about CAPE scores at DCI when middle school kids can take advanced math and get grouped in science and social studies classes with high achievers? In the high school, classes are tracked. We can't afford a private, didn't get into BASIS or a Latin and don't want to move, so we make the best of the situation.
If the classes are tracked, and you have a big enough cohort to stay advanced, then I agree, CAPE scores are irrelevant.
Bingo.
I would also add that you need to compare apples to apples.
As said in this thread, DCI has 20 times more ELL and SPED. If Latin had similar kids, numbers would be very different
Apples to apples, you say? Do you always just make sh*t up?
1. There are not lots more SPEDs at DCI than Latin. Not sure why you think DCI would attract more SPEDs than Latin. Plus, don't SPED kids typically get extra time on CAPE? Why would you think that there are lots more at DCI than Latin, and why do you think that they do worse on standardized tests with accommodations?
2. There are more ELL at DCI than Latin for obvious reasons. However, there are about 4 or 5 times more ELL at DCI, not 20 times as you claim. Moreover, if you look at ACCESS test results, the ELL at Latin do better than DCI. In the last testing cycle, 17% of ELL at Latin tested proficient compared to 5% at DCI. So, Latin does a better job teaching English to ELL than DCI.
3. Hopefully, kids at DCI speak pretty good English by 10th grade. However, if you look at CAPE results for 10th grade, 63.8% of DCI students are below grade level in ELA.
4. Looking at math in 10th grade, 93.7% of DCI students are below grade level in math. And math doesn't require English fluency.
What is this crazy word salad? DCI does have more English learners, more at risk students and more special ed students. I don’t think that makes it easier for them to do well on the CAPE or whatever.
Not sure where this insecurity is coming from. If you’re happy at Latin relax.
+1. I’m the PP above and that 20 times was an error. That data was for Walls. But yes, DCI has significantly more SPED and ELL than Latin. The data is there in the DC report card as my source.
You sound ignorant about SPED. Just because some have time accommodations on testing does not make it an even playing field for all SPED students and miraculously they perform just as well as a non-SPED kid. Please educate yourself.
CAPE is not the best test to assess a school if there is tracking as another poster above pointed out. I would argue you should look at SAT results and you will see that DCI and Latin are similar although DCI has significantly more ELL and SPED.
DCI boosters never give up. Just keep making excuses!
lol
+1. Seems to be a cult.
So 2 posters above can’t refute facts and so call people posting a booster. Lots of credibility in your statements.
Here are actual numbers and data. I have averaged out the middle and high school for Latin since DCI is not broken down into middle and high school
LATIN
ELL 8.5%
SPED 13%
DCI
ELL 20.8%
SPED 20.5%
So DCI has whooping 2.5 times more ELL and 60% more SPED.
Now let’s look also to at risk LATIN 10%, DCI 17.2%., so about 70% more.
Yet SAT scores both scores pretty similar. Looks to me like DCI has much tougher study body to educate and doing just as well.
Lastly if kids are taking AP Calculus as early as 10th grade then I would not rely on math CAPE. You have small group of 10th graders, larger group of 11th graders, and even larger group of 12th graders who might not be taking CAPE at all. This has been discussed numerous times that if a school offers very advance math, then CAPE is not truly reflective of the student body since many kids are not taking it.
This is all fine, but the post is about DCI and Walls. Not sure why we need this Latin info. DCI and Latin are completely different schools and will attract different types of kids. But again, this info is not helpful to OP since they asked about DCI and Wallls. There are a lot of very defensive DCI posters here.
Why would you say DCI and Latin attract different types of kids? The schools aren’t clones, but the kids aren’t that different. We just picked Latin over DCI and it was a difficult choice.
DCI and Latin are very different schools with very different course offerings, extracurriculars and educational models. DCI is a lot bigger and relies on tech a lot. Not all kids can handle that or families want that. My oldest is at DCI middle and it felt very sink or swim which is fine for kids that can handle it. We would have chosen Latin if they had gotten a spot because it would have been a better fit for our kid.
NP. DCI isn’t that big. There is 200-260 kids in each grade so 600-700 kids in the middle school.
The 2 families I know that chose Latin over DCI was because their kid needed a small school and more teacher attention due to various reasons.
We chose DCI over Latin because there much more course offerings, more tracking, more advance language offerings, and more EC, clubs, and sport offerings. The facilities is also much better.
In addition, we really like the IB diploma option and opportunities for colleges abroad.
Ok, well, Latin barely takes anyone off their massive waitlist because so few people turn them down. It’s surprising and seems statistically unlikely that you would know of three examples.
Yes there is 3 of us. I turned it down so prove that the waitlist moved. Just because you know no one doesn’t mean that other people can’t know someone.
Yes, people with options turn them down. The people who don’t have options don’t.
That is the point of this whole thread and discussion is feeder families and families at DCI have options and are considering such, if that is Walls, Latin, or whatever school.
If that doesn’t pertain to you, feel free to move on.
You're not very good at lying.
PP here. Not lying at all. Doesn’t matter to me if you don’t want to believe the truth.
But hey, feel free to be in your echo chamber of denial……
LOL. There's 501 kids on the waitlist for fifth grade at Latin 2nd Street. That's for 71 seats. Show me another school in DC that has seven kids on the waitlist for every available seat. This year, Latin has made a grand total of five waitlist offers.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sweeping statement bearing little relationship to reality. Who cares about CAPE scores at DCI when middle school kids can take advanced math and get grouped in science and social studies classes with high achievers? In the high school, classes are tracked. We can't afford a private, didn't get into BASIS or a Latin and don't want to move, so we make the best of the situation.
If the classes are tracked, and you have a big enough cohort to stay advanced, then I agree, CAPE scores are irrelevant.
Bingo.
I would also add that you need to compare apples to apples.
As said in this thread, DCI has 20 times more ELL and SPED. If Latin had similar kids, numbers would be very different
Apples to apples, you say? Do you always just make sh*t up?
1. There are not lots more SPEDs at DCI than Latin. Not sure why you think DCI would attract more SPEDs than Latin. Plus, don't SPED kids typically get extra time on CAPE? Why would you think that there are lots more at DCI than Latin, and why do you think that they do worse on standardized tests with accommodations?
2. There are more ELL at DCI than Latin for obvious reasons. However, there are about 4 or 5 times more ELL at DCI, not 20 times as you claim. Moreover, if you look at ACCESS test results, the ELL at Latin do better than DCI. In the last testing cycle, 17% of ELL at Latin tested proficient compared to 5% at DCI. So, Latin does a better job teaching English to ELL than DCI.
3. Hopefully, kids at DCI speak pretty good English by 10th grade. However, if you look at CAPE results for 10th grade, 63.8% of DCI students are below grade level in ELA.
4. Looking at math in 10th grade, 93.7% of DCI students are below grade level in math. And math doesn't require English fluency.
What is this crazy word salad? DCI does have more English learners, more at risk students and more special ed students. I don’t think that makes it easier for them to do well on the CAPE or whatever.
Not sure where this insecurity is coming from. If you’re happy at Latin relax.
+1. I’m the PP above and that 20 times was an error. That data was for Walls. But yes, DCI has significantly more SPED and ELL than Latin. The data is there in the DC report card as my source.
You sound ignorant about SPED. Just because some have time accommodations on testing does not make it an even playing field for all SPED students and miraculously they perform just as well as a non-SPED kid. Please educate yourself.
CAPE is not the best test to assess a school if there is tracking as another poster above pointed out. I would argue you should look at SAT results and you will see that DCI and Latin are similar although DCI has significantly more ELL and SPED.
DCI boosters never give up. Just keep making excuses!
lol
+1. Seems to be a cult.
So 2 posters above can’t refute facts and so call people posting a booster. Lots of credibility in your statements.
Here are actual numbers and data. I have averaged out the middle and high school for Latin since DCI is not broken down into middle and high school
LATIN
ELL 8.5%
SPED 13%
DCI
ELL 20.8%
SPED 20.5%
So DCI has whooping 2.5 times more ELL and 60% more SPED.
Now let’s look also to at risk LATIN 10%, DCI 17.2%., so about 70% more.
Yet SAT scores both scores pretty similar. Looks to me like DCI has much tougher study body to educate and doing just as well.
Lastly if kids are taking AP Calculus as early as 10th grade then I would not rely on math CAPE. You have small group of 10th graders, larger group of 11th graders, and even larger group of 12th graders who might not be taking CAPE at all. This has been discussed numerous times that if a school offers very advance math, then CAPE is not truly reflective of the student body since many kids are not taking it.
This is all fine, but the post is about DCI and Walls. Not sure why we need this Latin info. DCI and Latin are completely different schools and will attract different types of kids. But again, this info is not helpful to OP since they asked about DCI and Wallls. There are a lot of very defensive DCI posters here.
Why would you say DCI and Latin attract different types of kids? The schools aren’t clones, but the kids aren’t that different. We just picked Latin over DCI and it was a difficult choice.
DCI and Latin are very different schools with very different course offerings, extracurriculars and educational models. DCI is a lot bigger and relies on tech a lot. Not all kids can handle that or families want that. My oldest is at DCI middle and it felt very sink or swim which is fine for kids that can handle it. We would have chosen Latin if they had gotten a spot because it would have been a better fit for our kid.
NP. DCI isn’t that big. There is 200-260 kids in each grade so 600-700 kids in the middle school.
The 2 families I know that chose Latin over DCI was because their kid needed a small school and more teacher attention due to various reasons.
We chose DCI over Latin because there much more course offerings, more tracking, more advance language offerings, and more EC, clubs, and sport offerings. The facilities is also much better.
In addition, we really like the IB diploma option and opportunities for colleges abroad.
Ok, well, Latin barely takes anyone off their massive waitlist because so few people turn them down. It’s surprising and seems statistically unlikely that you would know of three examples.
Yes there is 3 of us. I turned it down so prove that the waitlist moved. Just because you know no one doesn’t mean that other people can’t know someone.
Yes, people with options turn them down. The people who don’t have options don’t.
That is the point of this whole thread and discussion is feeder families and families at DCI have options and are considering such, if that is Walls, Latin, or whatever school.
If that doesn’t pertain to you, feel free to move on.
You're not very good at lying.
PP here. Not lying at all. Doesn’t matter to me if you don’t want to believe the truth.
But hey, feel free to be in your echo chamber of denial……
PP I also know of several at dci who got into walls and decided to stay for the IB diploma. I just wouldn’t waste your time with this person as it seems clear there is a mental health issue.
I am sure there are a few that decided to stay. We are at DCI middle and don’t know anyone that turned down Walls. This doesn’t prove that one school is “better”. Just shows that people make the best decisions for their kids.
Sure but PP is talking about a poster who is adamant that families don’t turn down Latin. In fact families do.
It is a fact that there is not many decent middle schools EOTP so those with no options won’t turn Latin down. But those with options , some will. Not sure why that is so hard to understand.
It’s great that DCI is a good option for some kids and their families.
It's pretty rare for people to turn down Latin. If they did, you'd see it in the numbers. But the waitlist barely moves.
Well, it moved 7 spots so 7 people turned it down.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sweeping statement bearing little relationship to reality. Who cares about CAPE scores at DCI when middle school kids can take advanced math and get grouped in science and social studies classes with high achievers? In the high school, classes are tracked. We can't afford a private, didn't get into BASIS or a Latin and don't want to move, so we make the best of the situation.
If the classes are tracked, and you have a big enough cohort to stay advanced, then I agree, CAPE scores are irrelevant.
Bingo.
I would also add that you need to compare apples to apples.
As said in this thread, DCI has 20 times more ELL and SPED. If Latin had similar kids, numbers would be very different
Apples to apples, you say? Do you always just make sh*t up?
1. There are not lots more SPEDs at DCI than Latin. Not sure why you think DCI would attract more SPEDs than Latin. Plus, don't SPED kids typically get extra time on CAPE? Why would you think that there are lots more at DCI than Latin, and why do you think that they do worse on standardized tests with accommodations?
2. There are more ELL at DCI than Latin for obvious reasons. However, there are about 4 or 5 times more ELL at DCI, not 20 times as you claim. Moreover, if you look at ACCESS test results, the ELL at Latin do better than DCI. In the last testing cycle, 17% of ELL at Latin tested proficient compared to 5% at DCI. So, Latin does a better job teaching English to ELL than DCI.
3. Hopefully, kids at DCI speak pretty good English by 10th grade. However, if you look at CAPE results for 10th grade, 63.8% of DCI students are below grade level in ELA.
4. Looking at math in 10th grade, 93.7% of DCI students are below grade level in math. And math doesn't require English fluency.
What is this crazy word salad? DCI does have more English learners, more at risk students and more special ed students. I don’t think that makes it easier for them to do well on the CAPE or whatever.
Not sure where this insecurity is coming from. If you’re happy at Latin relax.
+1. I’m the PP above and that 20 times was an error. That data was for Walls. But yes, DCI has significantly more SPED and ELL than Latin. The data is there in the DC report card as my source.
You sound ignorant about SPED. Just because some have time accommodations on testing does not make it an even playing field for all SPED students and miraculously they perform just as well as a non-SPED kid. Please educate yourself.
CAPE is not the best test to assess a school if there is tracking as another poster above pointed out. I would argue you should look at SAT results and you will see that DCI and Latin are similar although DCI has significantly more ELL and SPED.
DCI boosters never give up. Just keep making excuses!
lol
+1. Seems to be a cult.
So 2 posters above can’t refute facts and so call people posting a booster. Lots of credibility in your statements.
Here are actual numbers and data. I have averaged out the middle and high school for Latin since DCI is not broken down into middle and high school
LATIN
ELL 8.5%
SPED 13%
DCI
ELL 20.8%
SPED 20.5%
So DCI has whooping 2.5 times more ELL and 60% more SPED.
Now let’s look also to at risk LATIN 10%, DCI 17.2%., so about 70% more.
Yet SAT scores both scores pretty similar. Looks to me like DCI has much tougher study body to educate and doing just as well.
Lastly if kids are taking AP Calculus as early as 10th grade then I would not rely on math CAPE. You have small group of 10th graders, larger group of 11th graders, and even larger group of 12th graders who might not be taking CAPE at all. This has been discussed numerous times that if a school offers very advance math, then CAPE is not truly reflective of the student body since many kids are not taking it.
This is all fine, but the post is about DCI and Walls. Not sure why we need this Latin info. DCI and Latin are completely different schools and will attract different types of kids. But again, this info is not helpful to OP since they asked about DCI and Wallls. There are a lot of very defensive DCI posters here.
Why would you say DCI and Latin attract different types of kids? The schools aren’t clones, but the kids aren’t that different. We just picked Latin over DCI and it was a difficult choice.
DCI and Latin are very different schools with very different course offerings, extracurriculars and educational models. DCI is a lot bigger and relies on tech a lot. Not all kids can handle that or families want that. My oldest is at DCI middle and it felt very sink or swim which is fine for kids that can handle it. We would have chosen Latin if they had gotten a spot because it would have been a better fit for our kid.
NP. DCI isn’t that big. There is 200-260 kids in each grade so 600-700 kids in the middle school.
The 2 families I know that chose Latin over DCI was because their kid needed a small school and more teacher attention due to various reasons.
We chose DCI over Latin because there much more course offerings, more tracking, more advance language offerings, and more EC, clubs, and sport offerings. The facilities is also much better.
In addition, we really like the IB diploma option and opportunities for colleges abroad.
Ok, well, Latin barely takes anyone off their massive waitlist because so few people turn them down. It’s surprising and seems statistically unlikely that you would know of three examples.
Yes there is 3 of us. I turned it down so prove that the waitlist moved. Just because you know no one doesn’t mean that other people can’t know someone.
Yes, people with options turn them down. The people who don’t have options don’t.
That is the point of this whole thread and discussion is feeder families and families at DCI have options and are considering such, if that is Walls, Latin, or whatever school.
If that doesn’t pertain to you, feel free to move on.
You're not very good at lying.
PP here. Not lying at all. Doesn’t matter to me if you don’t want to believe the truth.
But hey, feel free to be in your echo chamber of denial……
PP I also know of several at dci who got into walls and decided to stay for the IB diploma. I just wouldn’t waste your time with this person as it seems clear there is a mental health issue.
I am sure there are a few that decided to stay. We are at DCI middle and don’t know anyone that turned down Walls. This doesn’t prove that one school is “better”. Just shows that people make the best decisions for their kids.
Sure but PP is talking about a poster who is adamant that families don’t turn down Latin. In fact families do.
It is a fact that there is not many decent middle schools EOTP so those with no options won’t turn Latin down. But those with options , some will. Not sure why that is so hard to understand.
It’s great that DCI is a good option for some kids and their families.
It's pretty rare for people to turn down Latin. If they did, you'd see it in the numbers. But the waitlist barely moves.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sweeping statement bearing little relationship to reality. Who cares about CAPE scores at DCI when middle school kids can take advanced math and get grouped in science and social studies classes with high achievers? In the high school, classes are tracked. We can't afford a private, didn't get into BASIS or a Latin and don't want to move, so we make the best of the situation.
If the classes are tracked, and you have a big enough cohort to stay advanced, then I agree, CAPE scores are irrelevant.
Bingo.
I would also add that you need to compare apples to apples.
As said in this thread, DCI has 20 times more ELL and SPED. If Latin had similar kids, numbers would be very different
Apples to apples, you say? Do you always just make sh*t up?
1. There are not lots more SPEDs at DCI than Latin. Not sure why you think DCI would attract more SPEDs than Latin. Plus, don't SPED kids typically get extra time on CAPE? Why would you think that there are lots more at DCI than Latin, and why do you think that they do worse on standardized tests with accommodations?
2. There are more ELL at DCI than Latin for obvious reasons. However, there are about 4 or 5 times more ELL at DCI, not 20 times as you claim. Moreover, if you look at ACCESS test results, the ELL at Latin do better than DCI. In the last testing cycle, 17% of ELL at Latin tested proficient compared to 5% at DCI. So, Latin does a better job teaching English to ELL than DCI.
3. Hopefully, kids at DCI speak pretty good English by 10th grade. However, if you look at CAPE results for 10th grade, 63.8% of DCI students are below grade level in ELA.
4. Looking at math in 10th grade, 93.7% of DCI students are below grade level in math. And math doesn't require English fluency.
What is this crazy word salad? DCI does have more English learners, more at risk students and more special ed students. I don’t think that makes it easier for them to do well on the CAPE or whatever.
Not sure where this insecurity is coming from. If you’re happy at Latin relax.
+1. I’m the PP above and that 20 times was an error. That data was for Walls. But yes, DCI has significantly more SPED and ELL than Latin. The data is there in the DC report card as my source.
You sound ignorant about SPED. Just because some have time accommodations on testing does not make it an even playing field for all SPED students and miraculously they perform just as well as a non-SPED kid. Please educate yourself.
CAPE is not the best test to assess a school if there is tracking as another poster above pointed out. I would argue you should look at SAT results and you will see that DCI and Latin are similar although DCI has significantly more ELL and SPED.
DCI boosters never give up. Just keep making excuses!
lol
+1. Seems to be a cult.
So 2 posters above can’t refute facts and so call people posting a booster. Lots of credibility in your statements.
Here are actual numbers and data. I have averaged out the middle and high school for Latin since DCI is not broken down into middle and high school
LATIN
ELL 8.5%
SPED 13%
DCI
ELL 20.8%
SPED 20.5%
So DCI has whooping 2.5 times more ELL and 60% more SPED.
Now let’s look also to at risk LATIN 10%, DCI 17.2%., so about 70% more.
Yet SAT scores both scores pretty similar. Looks to me like DCI has much tougher study body to educate and doing just as well.
Lastly if kids are taking AP Calculus as early as 10th grade then I would not rely on math CAPE. You have small group of 10th graders, larger group of 11th graders, and even larger group of 12th graders who might not be taking CAPE at all. This has been discussed numerous times that if a school offers very advance math, then CAPE is not truly reflective of the student body since many kids are not taking it.
This is all fine, but the post is about DCI and Walls. Not sure why we need this Latin info. DCI and Latin are completely different schools and will attract different types of kids. But again, this info is not helpful to OP since they asked about DCI and Wallls. There are a lot of very defensive DCI posters here.
Why would you say DCI and Latin attract different types of kids? The schools aren’t clones, but the kids aren’t that different. We just picked Latin over DCI and it was a difficult choice.
DCI and Latin are very different schools with very different course offerings, extracurriculars and educational models. DCI is a lot bigger and relies on tech a lot. Not all kids can handle that or families want that. My oldest is at DCI middle and it felt very sink or swim which is fine for kids that can handle it. We would have chosen Latin if they had gotten a spot because it would have been a better fit for our kid.
NP. DCI isn’t that big. There is 200-260 kids in each grade so 600-700 kids in the middle school.
The 2 families I know that chose Latin over DCI was because their kid needed a small school and more teacher attention due to various reasons.
We chose DCI over Latin because there much more course offerings, more tracking, more advance language offerings, and more EC, clubs, and sport offerings. The facilities is also much better.
In addition, we really like the IB diploma option and opportunities for colleges abroad.
Ok, well, Latin barely takes anyone off their massive waitlist because so few people turn them down. It’s surprising and seems statistically unlikely that you would know of three examples.
Yes there is 3 of us. I turned it down so prove that the waitlist moved. Just because you know no one doesn’t mean that other people can’t know someone.
Yes, people with options turn them down. The people who don’t have options don’t.
That is the point of this whole thread and discussion is feeder families and families at DCI have options and are considering such, if that is Walls, Latin, or whatever school.
If that doesn’t pertain to you, feel free to move on.
You're not very good at lying.
PP here. Not lying at all. Doesn’t matter to me if you don’t want to believe the truth.
But hey, feel free to be in your echo chamber of denial……
PP I also know of several at dci who got into walls and decided to stay for the IB diploma. I just wouldn’t waste your time with this person as it seems clear there is a mental health issue.
I am sure there are a few that decided to stay. We are at DCI middle and don’t know anyone that turned down Walls. This doesn’t prove that one school is “better”. Just shows that people make the best decisions for their kids.
Sure but PP is talking about a poster who is adamant that families don’t turn down Latin. In fact families do.
It is a fact that there is not many decent middle schools EOTP so those with no options won’t turn Latin down. But those with options , some will. Not sure why that is so hard to understand.
It’s great that DCI is a good option for some kids and their families.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sweeping statement bearing little relationship to reality. Who cares about CAPE scores at DCI when middle school kids can take advanced math and get grouped in science and social studies classes with high achievers? In the high school, classes are tracked. We can't afford a private, didn't get into BASIS or a Latin and don't want to move, so we make the best of the situation.
If the classes are tracked, and you have a big enough cohort to stay advanced, then I agree, CAPE scores are irrelevant.
Bingo.
I would also add that you need to compare apples to apples.
As said in this thread, DCI has 20 times more ELL and SPED. If Latin had similar kids, numbers would be very different
Apples to apples, you say? Do you always just make sh*t up?
1. There are not lots more SPEDs at DCI than Latin. Not sure why you think DCI would attract more SPEDs than Latin. Plus, don't SPED kids typically get extra time on CAPE? Why would you think that there are lots more at DCI than Latin, and why do you think that they do worse on standardized tests with accommodations?
2. There are more ELL at DCI than Latin for obvious reasons. However, there are about 4 or 5 times more ELL at DCI, not 20 times as you claim. Moreover, if you look at ACCESS test results, the ELL at Latin do better than DCI. In the last testing cycle, 17% of ELL at Latin tested proficient compared to 5% at DCI. So, Latin does a better job teaching English to ELL than DCI.
3. Hopefully, kids at DCI speak pretty good English by 10th grade. However, if you look at CAPE results for 10th grade, 63.8% of DCI students are below grade level in ELA.
4. Looking at math in 10th grade, 93.7% of DCI students are below grade level in math. And math doesn't require English fluency.
What is this crazy word salad? DCI does have more English learners, more at risk students and more special ed students. I don’t think that makes it easier for them to do well on the CAPE or whatever.
Not sure where this insecurity is coming from. If you’re happy at Latin relax.
+1. I’m the PP above and that 20 times was an error. That data was for Walls. But yes, DCI has significantly more SPED and ELL than Latin. The data is there in the DC report card as my source.
You sound ignorant about SPED. Just because some have time accommodations on testing does not make it an even playing field for all SPED students and miraculously they perform just as well as a non-SPED kid. Please educate yourself.
CAPE is not the best test to assess a school if there is tracking as another poster above pointed out. I would argue you should look at SAT results and you will see that DCI and Latin are similar although DCI has significantly more ELL and SPED.
DCI boosters never give up. Just keep making excuses!
lol
+1. Seems to be a cult.
So 2 posters above can’t refute facts and so call people posting a booster. Lots of credibility in your statements.
Here are actual numbers and data. I have averaged out the middle and high school for Latin since DCI is not broken down into middle and high school
LATIN
ELL 8.5%
SPED 13%
DCI
ELL 20.8%
SPED 20.5%
So DCI has whooping 2.5 times more ELL and 60% more SPED.
Now let’s look also to at risk LATIN 10%, DCI 17.2%., so about 70% more.
Yet SAT scores both scores pretty similar. Looks to me like DCI has much tougher study body to educate and doing just as well.
Lastly if kids are taking AP Calculus as early as 10th grade then I would not rely on math CAPE. You have small group of 10th graders, larger group of 11th graders, and even larger group of 12th graders who might not be taking CAPE at all. This has been discussed numerous times that if a school offers very advance math, then CAPE is not truly reflective of the student body since many kids are not taking it.
This is all fine, but the post is about DCI and Walls. Not sure why we need this Latin info. DCI and Latin are completely different schools and will attract different types of kids. But again, this info is not helpful to OP since they asked about DCI and Wallls. There are a lot of very defensive DCI posters here.
Why would you say DCI and Latin attract different types of kids? The schools aren’t clones, but the kids aren’t that different. We just picked Latin over DCI and it was a difficult choice.
DCI and Latin are very different schools with very different course offerings, extracurriculars and educational models. DCI is a lot bigger and relies on tech a lot. Not all kids can handle that or families want that. My oldest is at DCI middle and it felt very sink or swim which is fine for kids that can handle it. We would have chosen Latin if they had gotten a spot because it would have been a better fit for our kid.
NP. DCI isn’t that big. There is 200-260 kids in each grade so 600-700 kids in the middle school.
The 2 families I know that chose Latin over DCI was because their kid needed a small school and more teacher attention due to various reasons.
We chose DCI over Latin because there much more course offerings, more tracking, more advance language offerings, and more EC, clubs, and sport offerings. The facilities is also much better.
In addition, we really like the IB diploma option and opportunities for colleges abroad.
Ok, well, Latin barely takes anyone off their massive waitlist because so few people turn them down. It’s surprising and seems statistically unlikely that you would know of three examples.
Yes there is 3 of us. I turned it down so prove that the waitlist moved. Just because you know no one doesn’t mean that other people can’t know someone.
Yes, people with options turn them down. The people who don’t have options don’t.
That is the point of this whole thread and discussion is feeder families and families at DCI have options and are considering such, if that is Walls, Latin, or whatever school.
If that doesn’t pertain to you, feel free to move on.
You're not very good at lying.
PP here. Not lying at all. Doesn’t matter to me if you don’t want to believe the truth.
But hey, feel free to be in your echo chamber of denial……
PP I also know of several at dci who got into walls and decided to stay for the IB diploma. I just wouldn’t waste your time with this person as it seems clear there is a mental health issue.
I am sure there are a few that decided to stay. We are at DCI middle and don’t know anyone that turned down Walls. This doesn’t prove that one school is “better”. Just shows that people make the best decisions for their kids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sweeping statement bearing little relationship to reality. Who cares about CAPE scores at DCI when middle school kids can take advanced math and get grouped in science and social studies classes with high achievers? In the high school, classes are tracked. We can't afford a private, didn't get into BASIS or a Latin and don't want to move, so we make the best of the situation.
If the classes are tracked, and you have a big enough cohort to stay advanced, then I agree, CAPE scores are irrelevant.
Bingo.
I would also add that you need to compare apples to apples.
As said in this thread, DCI has 20 times more ELL and SPED. If Latin had similar kids, numbers would be very different
Apples to apples, you say? Do you always just make sh*t up?
1. There are not lots more SPEDs at DCI than Latin. Not sure why you think DCI would attract more SPEDs than Latin. Plus, don't SPED kids typically get extra time on CAPE? Why would you think that there are lots more at DCI than Latin, and why do you think that they do worse on standardized tests with accommodations?
2. There are more ELL at DCI than Latin for obvious reasons. However, there are about 4 or 5 times more ELL at DCI, not 20 times as you claim. Moreover, if you look at ACCESS test results, the ELL at Latin do better than DCI. In the last testing cycle, 17% of ELL at Latin tested proficient compared to 5% at DCI. So, Latin does a better job teaching English to ELL than DCI.
3. Hopefully, kids at DCI speak pretty good English by 10th grade. However, if you look at CAPE results for 10th grade, 63.8% of DCI students are below grade level in ELA.
4. Looking at math in 10th grade, 93.7% of DCI students are below grade level in math. And math doesn't require English fluency.
What is this crazy word salad? DCI does have more English learners, more at risk students and more special ed students. I don’t think that makes it easier for them to do well on the CAPE or whatever.
Not sure where this insecurity is coming from. If you’re happy at Latin relax.
+1. I’m the PP above and that 20 times was an error. That data was for Walls. But yes, DCI has significantly more SPED and ELL than Latin. The data is there in the DC report card as my source.
You sound ignorant about SPED. Just because some have time accommodations on testing does not make it an even playing field for all SPED students and miraculously they perform just as well as a non-SPED kid. Please educate yourself.
CAPE is not the best test to assess a school if there is tracking as another poster above pointed out. I would argue you should look at SAT results and you will see that DCI and Latin are similar although DCI has significantly more ELL and SPED.
DCI boosters never give up. Just keep making excuses!
lol
+1. Seems to be a cult.
So 2 posters above can’t refute facts and so call people posting a booster. Lots of credibility in your statements.
Here are actual numbers and data. I have averaged out the middle and high school for Latin since DCI is not broken down into middle and high school
LATIN
ELL 8.5%
SPED 13%
DCI
ELL 20.8%
SPED 20.5%
So DCI has whooping 2.5 times more ELL and 60% more SPED.
Now let’s look also to at risk LATIN 10%, DCI 17.2%., so about 70% more.
Yet SAT scores both scores pretty similar. Looks to me like DCI has much tougher study body to educate and doing just as well.
Lastly if kids are taking AP Calculus as early as 10th grade then I would not rely on math CAPE. You have small group of 10th graders, larger group of 11th graders, and even larger group of 12th graders who might not be taking CAPE at all. This has been discussed numerous times that if a school offers very advance math, then CAPE is not truly reflective of the student body since many kids are not taking it.
This is all fine, but the post is about DCI and Walls. Not sure why we need this Latin info. DCI and Latin are completely different schools and will attract different types of kids. But again, this info is not helpful to OP since they asked about DCI and Wallls. There are a lot of very defensive DCI posters here.
Why would you say DCI and Latin attract different types of kids? The schools aren’t clones, but the kids aren’t that different. We just picked Latin over DCI and it was a difficult choice.
DCI and Latin are very different schools with very different course offerings, extracurriculars and educational models. DCI is a lot bigger and relies on tech a lot. Not all kids can handle that or families want that. My oldest is at DCI middle and it felt very sink or swim which is fine for kids that can handle it. We would have chosen Latin if they had gotten a spot because it would have been a better fit for our kid.
NP. DCI isn’t that big. There is 200-260 kids in each grade so 600-700 kids in the middle school.
The 2 families I know that chose Latin over DCI was because their kid needed a small school and more teacher attention due to various reasons.
We chose DCI over Latin because there much more course offerings, more tracking, more advance language offerings, and more EC, clubs, and sport offerings. The facilities is also much better.
In addition, we really like the IB diploma option and opportunities for colleges abroad.
Ok, well, Latin barely takes anyone off their massive waitlist because so few people turn them down. It’s surprising and seems statistically unlikely that you would know of three examples.
Yes there is 3 of us. I turned it down so prove that the waitlist moved. Just because you know no one doesn’t mean that other people can’t know someone.
Yes, people with options turn them down. The people who don’t have options don’t.
That is the point of this whole thread and discussion is feeder families and families at DCI have options and are considering such, if that is Walls, Latin, or whatever school.
If that doesn’t pertain to you, feel free to move on.
You're not very good at lying.
PP here. Not lying at all. Doesn’t matter to me if you don’t want to believe the truth.
But hey, feel free to be in your echo chamber of denial……
PP I also know of several at dci who got into walls and decided to stay for the IB diploma. I just wouldn’t waste your time with this person as it seems clear there is a mental health issue.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sweeping statement bearing little relationship to reality. Who cares about CAPE scores at DCI when middle school kids can take advanced math and get grouped in science and social studies classes with high achievers? In the high school, classes are tracked. We can't afford a private, didn't get into BASIS or a Latin and don't want to move, so we make the best of the situation.
If the classes are tracked, and you have a big enough cohort to stay advanced, then I agree, CAPE scores are irrelevant.
Bingo.
I would also add that you need to compare apples to apples.
As said in this thread, DCI has 20 times more ELL and SPED. If Latin had similar kids, numbers would be very different
Apples to apples, you say? Do you always just make sh*t up?
1. There are not lots more SPEDs at DCI than Latin. Not sure why you think DCI would attract more SPEDs than Latin. Plus, don't SPED kids typically get extra time on CAPE? Why would you think that there are lots more at DCI than Latin, and why do you think that they do worse on standardized tests with accommodations?
2. There are more ELL at DCI than Latin for obvious reasons. However, there are about 4 or 5 times more ELL at DCI, not 20 times as you claim. Moreover, if you look at ACCESS test results, the ELL at Latin do better than DCI. In the last testing cycle, 17% of ELL at Latin tested proficient compared to 5% at DCI. So, Latin does a better job teaching English to ELL than DCI.
3. Hopefully, kids at DCI speak pretty good English by 10th grade. However, if you look at CAPE results for 10th grade, 63.8% of DCI students are below grade level in ELA.
4. Looking at math in 10th grade, 93.7% of DCI students are below grade level in math. And math doesn't require English fluency.
What is this crazy word salad? DCI does have more English learners, more at risk students and more special ed students. I don’t think that makes it easier for them to do well on the CAPE or whatever.
Not sure where this insecurity is coming from. If you’re happy at Latin relax.
+1. I’m the PP above and that 20 times was an error. That data was for Walls. But yes, DCI has significantly more SPED and ELL than Latin. The data is there in the DC report card as my source.
You sound ignorant about SPED. Just because some have time accommodations on testing does not make it an even playing field for all SPED students and miraculously they perform just as well as a non-SPED kid. Please educate yourself.
CAPE is not the best test to assess a school if there is tracking as another poster above pointed out. I would argue you should look at SAT results and you will see that DCI and Latin are similar although DCI has significantly more ELL and SPED.
DCI boosters never give up. Just keep making excuses!
lol
+1. Seems to be a cult.
So 2 posters above can’t refute facts and so call people posting a booster. Lots of credibility in your statements.
Here are actual numbers and data. I have averaged out the middle and high school for Latin since DCI is not broken down into middle and high school
LATIN
ELL 8.5%
SPED 13%
DCI
ELL 20.8%
SPED 20.5%
So DCI has whooping 2.5 times more ELL and 60% more SPED.
Now let’s look also to at risk LATIN 10%, DCI 17.2%., so about 70% more.
Yet SAT scores both scores pretty similar. Looks to me like DCI has much tougher study body to educate and doing just as well.
Lastly if kids are taking AP Calculus as early as 10th grade then I would not rely on math CAPE. You have small group of 10th graders, larger group of 11th graders, and even larger group of 12th graders who might not be taking CAPE at all. This has been discussed numerous times that if a school offers very advance math, then CAPE is not truly reflective of the student body since many kids are not taking it.
This is all fine, but the post is about DCI and Walls. Not sure why we need this Latin info. DCI and Latin are completely different schools and will attract different types of kids. But again, this info is not helpful to OP since they asked about DCI and Wallls. There are a lot of very defensive DCI posters here.
Why would you say DCI and Latin attract different types of kids? The schools aren’t clones, but the kids aren’t that different. We just picked Latin over DCI and it was a difficult choice.
DCI and Latin are very different schools with very different course offerings, extracurriculars and educational models. DCI is a lot bigger and relies on tech a lot. Not all kids can handle that or families want that. My oldest is at DCI middle and it felt very sink or swim which is fine for kids that can handle it. We would have chosen Latin if they had gotten a spot because it would have been a better fit for our kid.
NP. DCI isn’t that big. There is 200-260 kids in each grade so 600-700 kids in the middle school.
The 2 families I know that chose Latin over DCI was because their kid needed a small school and more teacher attention due to various reasons.
We chose DCI over Latin because there much more course offerings, more tracking, more advance language offerings, and more EC, clubs, and sport offerings. The facilities is also much better.
In addition, we really like the IB diploma option and opportunities for colleges abroad.
Ok, well, Latin barely takes anyone off their massive waitlist because so few people turn them down. It’s surprising and seems statistically unlikely that you would know of three examples.
Yes there is 3 of us. I turned it down so prove that the waitlist moved. Just because you know no one doesn’t mean that other people can’t know someone.
Yes, people with options turn them down. The people who don’t have options don’t.
That is the point of this whole thread and discussion is feeder families and families at DCI have options and are considering such, if that is Walls, Latin, or whatever school.
If that doesn’t pertain to you, feel free to move on.
You're not very good at lying.
PP here. Not lying at all. Doesn’t matter to me if you don’t want to believe the truth.
But hey, feel free to be in your echo chamber of denial……
PP I also know of several at dci who got into walls and decided to stay for the IB diploma. I just wouldn’t waste your time with this person as it seems clear there is a mental health issue.