Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Amen to 8:00 AM---
That's why they should focus on taking the OOB population West of the Park and redirecting them "en masse" to one middle school in order to start creating the core mass of prepared students needed to create another functioning feeder pattern. Then take the EoftheP neighborhoods along 16th Street from Colonial Village down to Dupont and feed them into a maximum of three elementary schools and feed those into the new MS/HS as well. Right now---that corridor disperses the HIH into too many ES, none of which perform well (except perhaps for Shephard and Ross) beyond preK, K and the early grades---as the HIH parents peel off for charters, privates or west of the park OOB slots.
I actually think this is a reasonable idea. How do you constitute it? What makes it work?
If you just broke the feeder pattern at middle school would it work, e.g., no further feeder from out-of-boundary attendance at JKLM, etc., only geographic preference?
Or would you have to do something to limit access at PK4 or K for out-of-boundary students?
I say this assuming that you do some serious work on investing in these schools to make sure people are interested in attending them.
This is the left hand to the boundary commission right hand of this process - the Mayor can decide on the boundaries, but for them to work they need to program in some serious investment to entice people who are just knee-jerk avoiding their local school to stay. It’s really going to be incumbent on the Mayor to fund these schools to make that work.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Amen to 8:00 AM---
That's why they should focus on taking the OOB population West of the Park and redirecting them "en masse" to one middle school in order to start creating the core mass of prepared students needed to create another functioning feeder pattern. Then take the EoftheP neighborhoods along 16th Street from Colonial Village down to Dupont and feed them into a maximum of three elementary schools and feed those into the new MS/HS as well. Right now---that corridor disperses the HIH into too many ES, none of which perform well (except perhaps for Shephard and Ross) beyond preK, K and the early grades---as the HIH parents peel off for charters, privates or west of the park OOB slots.
I actually think this is a reasonable idea. How do you constitute it? What makes it work?
If you just broke the feeder pattern at middle school would it work, e.g., no further feeder from out-of-boundary attendance at JKLM, etc., only geographic preference?
Or would you have to do something to limit access at PK4 or K for out-of-boundary students?
I say this assuming that you do some serious work on investing in these schools to make sure people are interested in attending them.
This is the left hand to the boundary commission right hand of this process - the Mayor can decide on the boundaries, but for them to work they need to program in some serious investment to entice people who are just knee-jerk avoiding their local school to stay. It’s really going to be incumbent on the Mayor to fund these schools to make that work.
Anonymous wrote:Amen to 8:00 AM---
That's why they should focus on taking the OOB population West of the Park and redirecting them "en masse" to one middle school in order to start creating the core mass of prepared students needed to create another functioning feeder pattern. Then take the EoftheP neighborhoods along 16th Street from Colonial Village down to Dupont and feed them into a maximum of three elementary schools and feed those into the new MS/HS as well. Right now---that corridor disperses the HIH into too many ES, none of which perform well (except perhaps for Shephard and Ross) beyond preK, K and the early grades---as the HIH parents peel off for charters, privates or west of the park OOB slots.
Anonymous wrote:Calling the existing system "what works" is a joke. It's like that knight from the Monty Python Holy Grail movie saying, "come back, I'll bite your legs off." One working feeder patterrn in the entire city does not cut it.
Anonymous wrote:Our group focused on the need for all schools in the District to be on par with the handful of schools WotP. There is no excuse as to why DCPS can't get their act together.
Anonymous wrote:The scary thing is that This city and DCPS are capable of enacting such a plan in the name of equity. Here you have got to understand that mediocre/crappy equity trumps excellence every time. Every time. Excellence and success are actually dirty words if not everyone can have it at the same time. Even if there is a benefit down the road for everyone. There is no patience for that. The thought is "if I can't have it, neither can you" its deep
Anonymous wrote:Who is conducting the focus groups? That is -- DCPS employees or outside consultants?
Anonymous wrote:There's this thing about taxes in a democracy -- they go to everyone -- not just to the people who pay the most into the system.
Anonymous wrote:The thought is "if I can't have it, neither can you" its deep
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No - the thought is that if it comes at my expense, then you can't have it.