Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Still want to know if anything can be done. What about a petition? Just feel that this problem is so outrageous and feel frustrated that nothing is done to correct the problem
Send a message to sitting councilmembers that you won't be voting for them because of what they did for Ellington.
Especially those on the Education Committee, like Grosso.
Anonymous wrote:Still want to know if anything can be done. What about a petition? Just feel that this problem is so outrageous and feel frustrated that nothing is done to correct the problem
Anonymous wrote:Ugh.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The $178 million is going not just to the building renovation on R street but a portion was used to renovate the two swing space buildings. They were old buildings that were not ready to house an academic high school and arts program. No internet and wi-fi at the academic building, as an example-- every high school needs that. They didn't have the right portable classrooms there for science labs. The auditorium in the arts building down the street (where the ceiling has now caved in on the third floor) was terrible and not fit for performances of any kind.
Once Ellington moves out of these now renovated swing spaces other schools will occupy them.
Wait, Ellington renovated an auditorium in swing space? Why didn't they just use another school's auditorium for productions and save the money? And wi-fi didn't cost $178 million. It didn't even cost 1/10000th of that!
And it's no longer $178M -- the latest estimates are close to $210M.
Truly the MarionBar-ry School of the Arts and Grafts!
Source please? The $178M already made my head explode. If anyone authorizes $210M from DC funds...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The $178 million is going not just to the building renovation on R street but a portion was used to renovate the two swing space buildings. They were old buildings that were not ready to house an academic high school and arts program. No internet and wi-fi at the academic building, as an example-- every high school needs that. They didn't have the right portable classrooms there for science labs. The auditorium in the arts building down the street (where the ceiling has now caved in on the third floor) was terrible and not fit for performances of any kind.
Once Ellington moves out of these now renovated swing spaces other schools will occupy them.
Wait, Ellington renovated an auditorium in swing space? Why didn't they just use another school's auditorium for productions and save the money? And wi-fi didn't cost $178 million. It didn't even cost 1/10000th of that!
And it's no longer $178M -- the latest estimates are close to $210M.
Truly the MarionBar-ry School of the Arts and Grafts!
Anonymous wrote:The $178 million is going not just to the building renovation on R street but a portion was used to renovate the two swing space buildings. They were old buildings that were not ready to house an academic high school and arts program. No internet and wi-fi at the academic building, as an example-- every high school needs that. They didn't have the right portable classrooms there for science labs. The auditorium in the arts building down the street (where the ceiling has now caved in on the third floor) was terrible and not fit for performances of any kind.
Once Ellington moves out of these now renovated swing spaces other schools will occupy them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There seem to be one or two posters who have an ax to grind with Ellington. There's plenty to gripe about regarding renovation cost. Why the hate toward the Board and students? The Board doesn't admit students, the faculty does through an audition process. Would love to know if you're the same angry guy that complained about the former principal's salary.
People have been asking this several times, perhaps you know the answer. What is the proportion of students who come from outside DC?
No one 'hates' anyone. But the Ellington board is responsible here, as they have oversight responsibility for the school. It's not just the train wreck of shocking cost overruns, it's the fact that the board's governance and accountability processes seem totally dysfunctional.
With the huge subsidies by DC's taxpayers and the fact that Ellington turns away students, no one who lives outside DC should attend Ellington.
And if no 9th grade cello players apply next year (and the 3 they have now are graduating) how are they supposed to have an orchestra? Those are the places and circumstances where out of state students are accepted and pay tuition.
Well, at my old magnet, we'd pretty much take some violinists and make them switch. They only have 3 cello players though? That seems remarkably depressing and a sign that DCPS needs to get a damn music program back in place.
Of course, after my experience with DCPS, I see why that isn't happening. It's because people suck.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There seem to be one or two posters who have an ax to grind with Ellington. There's plenty to gripe about regarding renovation cost. Why the hate toward the Board and students? The Board doesn't admit students, the faculty does through an audition process. Would love to know if you're the same angry guy that complained about the former principal's salary.
People have been asking this several times, perhaps you know the answer. What is the proportion of students who come from outside DC?
No one 'hates' anyone. But the Ellington board is responsible here, as they have oversight responsibility for the school. It's not just the train wreck of shocking cost overruns, it's the fact that the board's governance and accountability processes seem totally dysfunctional.
With the huge subsidies by DC's taxpayers and the fact that Ellington turns away students, no one who lives outside DC should attend Ellington.
And if no 9th grade cello players apply next year (and the 3 they have now are graduating) how are they supposed to have an orchestra? Those are the places and circumstances where out of state students are accepted and pay tuition.
Well, at my old magnet, we'd pretty much take some violinists and make them switch. They only have 3 cello players though? That seems remarkably depressing and a sign that DCPS needs to get a damn music program back in place.
Of course, after my experience with DCPS, I see why that isn't happening. It's because people suck.
Anonymous wrote:The $178 million is going not just to the building renovation on R street but a portion was used to renovate the two swing space buildings. They were old buildings that were not ready to house an academic high school and arts program. No internet and wi-fi at the academic building, as an example-- every high school needs that. They didn't have the right portable classrooms there for science labs. The auditorium in the arts building down the street (where the ceiling has now caved in on the third floor) was terrible and not fit for performances of any kind.
Once Ellington moves out of these now renovated swing spaces other schools will occupy them.
Anonymous wrote:Operating budget is higher because kids have more teachers. They take all the regular high school classes (7 per day) which DCPS finds. The private foundation raises money to pay for the other three classes - the daily arts block.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There seem to be one or two posters who have an ax to grind with Ellington. There's plenty to gripe about regarding renovation cost. Why the hate toward the Board and students? The Board doesn't admit students, the faculty does through an audition process. Would love to know if you're the same angry guy that complained about the former principal's salary.
People have been asking this several times, perhaps you know the answer. What is the proportion of students who come from outside DC?
No one 'hates' anyone. But the Ellington board is responsible here, as they have oversight responsibility for the school. It's not just the train wreck of shocking cost overruns, it's the fact that the board's governance and accountability processes seem totally dysfunctional.
With the huge subsidies by DC's taxpayers and the fact that Ellington turns away students, no one who lives outside DC should attend Ellington.
What are the huge subsidies? How much and where are they from?
Same per pupil allocations and payments as any other DCPS school.