Anonymous wrote:Ditto. At my ward 6 school it is the AA parents who seem to have the highest standards about having their kids in middle school with the "right" kind of students and families who share their values. Yet it is white parents who get singled out for being "racist" when they express an extremely mild version of the same thing. Incredible.
Anonymous wrote:
Let's remember that Deal used to be the school of last resort only 6 years ago. Only half of the families from Lafayette and Murch were moving on to Deal. The school has done a complete 180 in 3 years. We should learn from this story.
Anonymous wrote:I think it is easy. If the middle class families aren't able to concentrate by the results of neighborhood demographics, or choosing some special program en mass, they leave! For charters, private whatever. So dcps has to choose. Concentrate them, or lose them. That is what has gone on unofficially for years at Hardy, Stuart Hobson and Jefferson long ago. Middle class families finding a place to concentrate themselves. Question is, as those middle class families begin to appear different ( more white ) will this concentrating be a political problem.
Anonymous wrote:From my perspective, here’s the key point in the paper:
“Research has long found that a given student will perform better in a middle-class school than in a high-poverty school. The highly regarded Coleman Report of the 1960s found that, after the influence of the family, the socioeconomic status of a school is the single most important determinant of a student’s academic success. The basic findings of the report—including that all children do better in middle-class schools—have been affirmed again and again in the research literature.”
Anonymous wrote:Is foreign language offered at any of the KIPP campuses. If so, which languages. TIA
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:demographic comparison from 2011 DC-CAS...
My younger two kids go to a very high poverty DCPS school and since they are young (preschool), I feel like its in many ways an advantage over being in a middle class school. Maybe they won't advance academically as much, but school when you are 3 is all about developing social skills. ... Obviously the higher up in school you get, this changes. Academics matter more and more.
Then let me chime in as someone who does have a child "higher up" and share that the "maybe they won't advance academically as much" is untrue. This is not to discount your perception, as the socio-economic and racial composition of classrooms is an honest concern all around. As someone whose child can be spotted from a mile away in a sea of black hair and skin (other than official stats, I'm having a much harder time seeing the socio-economic picture), I have to say that I've come to understand that it truly does not matter on the ground. My child does very well, academically and socially, and has an excellent set of friends and opportunities in school as well as outside. What mattered in the course of the past few years in the all too soon to conclude elementary school years was the quality of the teacher, the leadership at the school, and the parental community supporting it all, the teacher/leadership part characterized by ups and downs in our case but overall successful. And we parents are happy with our pick because we're involved and see first hand what's going on; that too impacts our children positively, socially and academically. While I now understand what to look for better than I did a couple of years ago, I am not naive. I know that perceptions and fears like these stifle our all success. Fortunately, I also know that it only takes a few to take others by the hand.