Superiorwitt wrote:Francis may end up one of the best schools in the city at some point.. I think they are trending upwards and their leadership seems aligned. There isnt much that they dont seem to do well from what ive seen.
Seaton would be highly sought after if not for their high school feeder. They are moving to a swing space for a few years starting in the fall.
From these areas, curious why Takoma ele, Height, Whittier, Barnard arent considered as well?
Anonymous wrote:Hi OP, we've been very happy at Lewis (child started in PK3) and plan to stay through at least 4th. I would say a handful of kids leave every year, mostly because they move or lottery into schools WOTP that feed into Deal or Hardy.
We plan to do the lottery for 5th grade but also hope that more Lewis families go to MacFarland. We know a few families who have 6th graders at MacFarland and are happy and I look forward to touring the school and learning more about it when we are closer to middle school.
For those folks who are super concerned with screen time, I wonder if you could say more about your concerns? For example, DCPS doesn't have IAs starting in 1st grade. Without screens, it would be extremely difficult for teachers to do small groups. Of course, it would be great if there were 2-3 teachers in every class so screens weren't as necessary, but as a center rotation I think it's totally fine. I will say that I think it's important that students aren't ONLY on screens during center rotations (e.g., there should be independent work stations, writing stations, etc) but I understand that screen time can be beneficial so students can work on things more individualized for them.
For folks with screen time concerns, would love to hear more about what you've seen that you DON'T like and/or what you wish was different.
Superiorwitt wrote:Francis may end up one of the best schools in the city at some point.. I think they are trending upwards and their leadership seems aligned. There isnt much that they dont seem to do well from what ive seen.
Seaton would be highly sought after if not for their high school feeder. They are moving to a swing space for a few years starting in the fall.
From these areas, curious why Takoma ele, Height, Whittier, Barnard arent considered as well?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hi OP, we've been very happy at Lewis (child started in PK3) and plan to stay through at least 4th. I would say a handful of kids leave every year, mostly because they move or lottery into schools WOTP that feed into Deal or Hardy.
We plan to do the lottery for 5th grade but also hope that more Lewis families go to MacFarland. We know a few families who have 6th graders at MacFarland and are happy and I look forward to touring the school and learning more about it when we are closer to middle school.
For those folks who are super concerned with screen time, I wonder if you could say more about your concerns? For example, DCPS doesn't have IAs starting in 1st grade. Without screens, it would be extremely difficult for teachers to do small groups. Of course, it would be great if there were 2-3 teachers in every class so screens weren't as necessary, but as a center rotation I think it's totally fine. I will say that I think it's important that students aren't ONLY on screens during center rotations (e.g., there should be independent work stations, writing stations, etc) but I understand that screen time can be beneficial so students can work on things more individualized for them.
For folks with screen time concerns, would love to hear more about what you've seen that you DON'T like and/or what you wish was different.
My kids have experienced a school with lots of screen use and a school with much less screen use, both DCPS.
As this is an anonymous forum.. are you able to name the schools?
At the first school, screens were used exclusively used for math differentiation -- things like ST Math and maybe Zearn. At the second school, the math coach provides challenging math work for kids who are ready, on paper. they also use iReady to let the kids work at their own pace, maybe 30 minutes a day. As far as I can tell, this is the only screen time in their day.
At the first school, the kids spent a lot of downtime on Clever, doing things like reading e-books. At the second school, this type of screen use never happens. They have "choice time" that is all hands-on (art, games, physical book reading, etc)
At the first school, the teachers would have screen "brain breaks" with random stuff like watching people jump around. Second school this never happens. I think they find other ways to get the kids to relax.
First school played lots of movies on off days (like before big breaks). Second school never happens.
Maybe relatedly, the second school also has a lot more hands-on project work.
Maybe I'm a luddite, but I do feel like the students seem more regulated and calm without the hours of staring at a screen. And the test scores at the second school are dramatically better.
Anonymous wrote:Please share the low screen dcps!
Anonymous wrote:Please share the low screen dcps!
Anonymous wrote:Please share the low screen dcps!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hi OP, we've been very happy at Lewis (child started in PK3) and plan to stay through at least 4th. I would say a handful of kids leave every year, mostly because they move or lottery into schools WOTP that feed into Deal or Hardy.
We plan to do the lottery for 5th grade but also hope that more Lewis families go to MacFarland. We know a few families who have 6th graders at MacFarland and are happy and I look forward to touring the school and learning more about it when we are closer to middle school.
For those folks who are super concerned with screen time, I wonder if you could say more about your concerns? For example, DCPS doesn't have IAs starting in 1st grade. Without screens, it would be extremely difficult for teachers to do small groups. Of course, it would be great if there were 2-3 teachers in every class so screens weren't as necessary, but as a center rotation I think it's totally fine. I will say that I think it's important that students aren't ONLY on screens during center rotations (e.g., there should be independent work stations, writing stations, etc) but I understand that screen time can be beneficial so students can work on things more individualized for them.
For folks with screen time concerns, would love to hear more about what you've seen that you DON'T like and/or what you wish was different.
My kids have experienced a school with lots of screen use and a school with much less screen use, both DCPS.
As this is an anonymous forum.. are you able to name the schools?
At the first school, screens were used exclusively used for math differentiation -- things like ST Math and maybe Zearn. At the second school, the math coach provides challenging math work for kids who are ready, on paper. they also use iReady to let the kids work at their own pace, maybe 30 minutes a day. As far as I can tell, this is the only screen time in their day.
At the first school, the kids spent a lot of downtime on Clever, doing things like reading e-books. At the second school, this type of screen use never happens. They have "choice time" that is all hands-on (art, games, physical book reading, etc)
At the first school, the teachers would have screen "brain breaks" with random stuff like watching people jump around. Second school this never happens. I think they find other ways to get the kids to relax.
First school played lots of movies on off days (like before big breaks). Second school never happens.
Maybe relatedly, the second school also has a lot more hands-on project work.
Maybe I'm a luddite, but I do feel like the students seem more regulated and calm without the hours of staring at a screen. And the test scores at the second school are dramatically better.
Anonymous wrote:Hi OP, we've been very happy at Lewis (child started in PK3) and plan to stay through at least 4th. I would say a handful of kids leave every year, mostly because they move or lottery into schools WOTP that feed into Deal or Hardy.
We plan to do the lottery for 5th grade but also hope that more Lewis families go to MacFarland. We know a few families who have 6th graders at MacFarland and are happy and I look forward to touring the school and learning more about it when we are closer to middle school.
For those folks who are super concerned with screen time, I wonder if you could say more about your concerns? For example, DCPS doesn't have IAs starting in 1st grade. Without screens, it would be extremely difficult for teachers to do small groups. Of course, it would be great if there were 2-3 teachers in every class so screens weren't as necessary, but as a center rotation I think it's totally fine. I will say that I think it's important that students aren't ONLY on screens during center rotations (e.g., there should be independent work stations, writing stations, etc) but I understand that screen time can be beneficial so students can work on things more individualized for them.
For folks with screen time concerns, would love to hear more about what you've seen that you DON'T like and/or what you wish was different.
Anonymous wrote:Not OP.
I am on the Hill with a rising K and PK3.
Just visited Lee and ITDS in the last two weeks. I came away liking Lee more - nice, well-lit classrooms, peaceful location back in a neighborhood, and seemed well-run. My kids were in Montessori daycare and seem to thrive in that model.
ITDS facilities seemed a bit grubby. Vibes weren’t as good in my opinion. Way less chance of getting into ITDS, but also seems like it would be a good option into higher grades than Lee.
This thread caused me to take a closer look at their school report cards and, at the end of the day, I’m probably swapping them so that Lee is my #6 and ITDS my #5 because of those troubling test scores and belief that Montessori is great for young children but probably can’t take you the distance the way ITDS could.