Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:PP, it must be awful to know that you have shelled out all the $$ for private. I can't imagine an SWS parent saying something like that, but I can imagine your sour grapes at not being able to buy your way in.
I'm the PP, and we didn't shell out anything for private. We love our Mandarin Immersion school, and the families that we share it with.
I'm merely commenting on the nastiness posed in the quote. It must be nice to not have to go to school with families that would say such things. Don't you think?
Yikes!
Anonymous wrote:Oh, yeah, the SWS parents are just dying to welcome more Ward 8 families into their United Colors of Bennetton school community.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The only issue here, is how do our elementary school students get to school? This morning I was packing my pre-schooler and his nap roll in a car, to drive him to school, and another parent was unloading his pre-schooler with his nap roll to go to SWS. How on Earth does this make any sense? The Ann Goding, Ludlow Taylor, and Logan schools were boundary schools for decades, until the child population dropped. Now that the old buildings have been re-opened as public schools, they should be boundary schools. Take a look at the old boundary map, the 3 schools coexisted just fine! If SWS and Logan insist on staying lottery schools, then they should become charters. In meeting with parents of SWS, they said that they get 'better' kids using the lottery system. I found that a sickening concept. One parent actually said, that if all of the kids were in-bounds, that the school would be 'ruined'. I am not making this up.
No one has ever said this. If you were at the DME meeting, the most you heard was arguments for city-wide because o the diversity.
And - just calm down OK. Why are you DRIVING your kid 3 blocks to Ludlow-Taylor?
This family is not driving to LT.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Correction ---- I live near Stanton Park and now my in-bounds elementary school is Watkins, which is far away and has a lot of troubled students. SWS should have a boundary that includes Stanton Park, or else Ludlow's boundary should move SOUTH to include Stanton (or Maury move west to include Stanton).
Curious how you know/discern this? Watkins does have high OOB and a significant FARMS. Is that what you are equating with troubled? It is a large elementary school, I think largest in Ward 6. But that of itself doesn't shed any light on why you perceive it as having troubled kids. I am in-bounds and a long-time Peabody/SWS (when it was in the Cluster) and Watkins parent. FWIW, Watkins white students have some of the highest achievement in DC-CAS in the city. Again, if you are drawing conclusions just from the racial/SES make-up of the school. And many OOB are actually Hill kids.
No, Tyler is the largest in Ward 6.
Anonymous wrote:PP, it must be awful to know that you have shelled out all the $$ for private. I can't imagine an SWS parent saying something like that, but I can imagine your sour grapes at not being able to buy your way in.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Correction ---- I live near Stanton Park and now my in-bounds elementary school is Watkins, which is far away and has a lot of troubled students. SWS should have a boundary that includes Stanton Park, or else Ludlow's boundary should move SOUTH to include Stanton (or Maury move west to include Stanton).
Curious how you know/discern this? Watkins does have high OOB and a significant FARMS. Is that what you are equating with troubled? It is a large elementary school, I think largest in Ward 6. But that of itself doesn't shed any light on why you perceive it as having troubled kids. I am in-bounds and a long-time Peabody/SWS (when it was in the Cluster) and Watkins parent. FWIW, Watkins white students have some of the highest achievement in DC-CAS in the city. Again, if you are drawing conclusions just from the racial/SES make-up of the school. And many OOB are actually Hill kids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The only issue here, is how do our elementary school students get to school? This morning I was packing my pre-schooler and his nap roll in a car, to drive him to school, and another parent was unloading his pre-schooler with his nap roll to go to SWS. How on Earth does this make any sense? The Ann Goding, Ludlow Taylor, and Logan schools were boundary schools for decades, until the child population dropped. Now that the old buildings have been re-opened as public schools, they should be boundary schools. Take a look at the old boundary map, the 3 schools coexisted just fine! If SWS and Logan insist on staying lottery schools, then they should become charters. In meeting with parents of SWS, they said that they get 'better' kids using the lottery system. I found that a sickening concept. One parent actually said, that if all of the kids were in-bounds, that the school would be 'ruined'. I am not making this up.
No one has ever said this. If you were at the DME meeting, the most you heard was arguments for city-wide because o the diversity.
And - just calm down OK. Why are you DRIVING your kid 3 blocks to Ludlow-Taylor?
Anonymous wrote:The only issue here, is how do our elementary school students get to school? This morning I was packing my pre-schooler and his nap roll in a car, to drive him to school, and another parent was unloading his pre-schooler with his nap roll to go to SWS. How on Earth does this make any sense? The Ann Goding, Ludlow Taylor, and Logan schools were boundary schools for decades, until the child population dropped. Now that the old buildings have been re-opened as public schools, they should be boundary schools. Take a look at the old boundary map, the 3 schools coexisted just fine! If SWS and Logan insist on staying lottery schools, then they should become charters. In meeting with parents of SWS, they said that they get 'better' kids using the lottery system. I found that a sickening concept. One parent actually said, that if all of the kids were in-bounds, that the school would be 'ruined'. I am not making this up.
Anonymous wrote:I live near Stanton Park and now my in-bounds elementary school is Watkins, which is far away and has a lot of troubled students. SWS should have a boundary that includes Stanton Park, or else Ludlow's boundary should move north to include Stanton (or Maury move west to include Stanton).
Anonymous wrote:The only issue here, is how do our elementary school students get to school? This morning I was packing my pre-schooler and his nap roll in a car, to drive him to school, and another parent was unloading his pre-schooler with his nap roll to go to SWS. How on Earth does this make any sense? The Ann Goding, Ludlow Taylor, and Logan schools were boundary schools for decades, until the child population dropped. Now that the old buildings have been re-opened as public schools, they should be boundary schools. Take a look at the old boundary map, the 3 schools coexisted just fine! If SWS and Logan insist on staying lottery schools, then they should become charters. In meeting with parents of SWS, they said that they get 'better' kids using the lottery system. I found that a sickening concept. One parent actually said, that if all of the kids were in-bounds, that the school would be 'ruined'. I am not making this up.
Anonymous wrote:The only issue here, is how do our elementary school students get to school? This morning I was packing my pre-schooler and his nap roll in a car, to drive him to school, and another parent was unloading his pre-schooler with his nap roll to go to SWS. How on Earth does this make any sense? The Ann Goding, Ludlow Taylor, and Logan schools were boundary schools for decades, until the child population dropped. Now that the old buildings have been re-opened as public schools, they should be boundary schools. Take a look at the old boundary map, the 3 schools coexisted just fine! If SWS and Logan insist on staying lottery schools, then they should become charters. In meeting with parents of SWS, they said that they get 'better' kids using the lottery system. I found that a sickening concept. One parent actually said, that if all of the kids were in-bounds, that the school would be 'ruined'. I am not making this up.