Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Putting the high school in the Hardy building and moving Hardy to the GDS McArthur building would have made so much more sense. The Hardy building is a lot more accessible to the rest of the city.
Agreed. The Georgetown ANC was adamant that Hardy remain a middle school. Apparently Ellington was also opposed to a high school nearby.
Anonymous wrote:Putting the high school in the Hardy building and moving Hardy to the GDS McArthur building would have made so much more sense. The Hardy building is a lot more accessible to the rest of the city.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How do people think this would change the SES balance at Wilson?
One of the things that came out in the Community Working Group was that Hardy is more diverse than Wilson overall, so removing Hardy would make Wilson less diverse. Assuming everything else stays the same.
But there's no winning. Unless Hardy had exactly the same profile as Wilson moving Hardy to another school either makes Wilson less diverse or the new school. It's mathematics.
Anonymous wrote:How do people think this would change the SES balance at Wilson?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Again reflecting DC's racial fears. The high schools are highly segregated, so the place for a new high school in DC is of course placed at the least accessible furthest corner of Georgetown.
Google Maps tells me if you get to the Anacostia Metro at 7:30 am, catch the Green Line then the D6, you can get to that location just before 9am.
Just the bus from Dupont Circle takes 36 minutes.
Who says all OOB kids come from EotR? You’d have to move heaven and earth to cut Janney out of Deal, but families who live IB for Janney will lottery for this school in droves. And that, plus the end of the Hardy-to-Wilson feed, will open up OOB seats at Wilson. Which is right on top of the train, a 30-minute ride from the Anacostia station. It’s a dynamic system.
Wilson is overcrowded by several hundred kids...and getting more so. My guess is that every OOB spot could be filled with kids zoned for Wilson (or allowed to go to Wilson due to feeder patterns) and there would still not be any OOB spots for Wilson.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Again reflecting DC's racial fears. The high schools are highly segregated, so the place for a new high school in DC is of course placed at the least accessible furthest corner of Georgetown.
Google Maps tells me if you get to the Anacostia Metro at 7:30 am, catch the Green Line then the D6, you can get to that location just before 9am.
Just the bus from Dupont Circle takes 36 minutes.
Who says all OOB kids come from EotR? You’d have to move heaven and earth to cut Janney out of Deal, but families who live IB for Janney will lottery for this school in droves. And that, plus the end of the Hardy-to-Wilson feed, will open up OOB seats at Wilson. Which is right on top of the train, a 30-minute ride from the Anacostia station. It’s a dynamic system.
Anonymous wrote:Of the portions that were proposed this makes the most sense. Hardy will be the feeder, so any family with a kid going to Hardy was already prepared to get them to the neighborhood.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Again reflecting DC's racial fears. The high schools are highly segregated, so the place for a new high school in DC is of course placed at the least accessible furthest corner of Georgetown.
Google Maps tells me if you get to the Anacostia Metro at 7:30 am, catch the Green Line then the D6, you can get to that location just before 9am.
So you wanna move some white people to Annacostia to hopefully full up all the open school seats? If the city wanted to get rid of high school boundaries they would have done it. Perhaps they did not cause they would have even more empty seats...
if the city wants to desegregate schools it would create a true magnet school centrally located. Dunbar is only at 50% capacity, turn that into a TJ or Boston Latin