Anonymous wrote:
According to Catania's website only 15% of the households in Ward 3 have school-age children. There are enough housing units in Ward 3 to house the entire DCPS population if every family wanted to and could afford to live there.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So if I am reading this thread correctly, the posters who are inboundary for overcrowded west of the park schools are chiding and belittling people who live in the rest of the city for not buying small apartments in those school neighborhoods.
You do realize that if all of us pretentious and poor planning people bought in your neighborhood your schools would be much more overcrowded? [/quote
Not really. 1. The wotp areas are built out and new units aren't being added in any statistically significant way. The housing stock is pretty static. All of "you" COULDN'T have bought in AU park, not physically possible.
But.
2. You COULD have bought in silver spring, Kensington, falls church, south Arlington, McLean, north Bethesda and 37 other zip codes with excellent schools for the same exact price.. However, you didn't. You prioritized other factors, ranging from commute to architecture to the concentration of farm-to-table trattorias.
According to Catania's website only 15% of the households in Ward 3 have school-age children. There are enough housing units in Ward 3 to house the entire DCPS population if every family wanted to and could afford to live there.
I realize that school boundaries don't overlap ward boundaries but I think the point is made.
http://d3n8a8pro7vhmx.cloudfront.net/davidcatania/pages/226/attachments/original/1383062653/Deal_Prep_Memo.pdf?1383062653
Anonymous wrote:So if I am reading this thread correctly, the posters who are inboundary for overcrowded west of the park schools are chiding and belittling people who live in the rest of the city for not buying small apartments in those school neighborhoods.
You do realize that if all of us pretentious and poor planning people bought in your neighborhood your schools would be much more overcrowded? [/quote
Not really. 1. The wotp areas are built out and new units aren't being added in any statistically significant way. The housing stock is pretty static. All of "you" COULDN'T have bought in AU park, not physically possible.
But.
2. You COULD have bought in silver spring, Kensington, falls church, south Arlington, McLean, north Bethesda and 37 other zip codes with excellent schools for the same exact price.. However, you didn't. You prioritized other factors, ranging from commute to architecture to the concentration of farm-to-table trattorias.
Anonymous wrote:What about building a new middle school? I remember that was brought up by Mary Cheh at some point a while back. Any mention of that in the focus groups, or other meetings? Or turning Duke Ellington back to Western. Seems like better option to overcrowding, Would have to pull kids from successful school and put them into failing ones in unsafe neighborhoods.
Anonymous wrote:A lot more commitment to differentiation and testing in programs in NYC. And there, "gifted and talented" isn't a dirty word. They actually have an official department called that with a formal admissions process: http://schools.nyc.gov/Academics/GiftedandTalented/default.htm
Anonymous wrote:A citywide lottery would be a disaster for a lot of reasons. You scatter children all over a city that has a failing transit system and many households where both parents work and barely have enough time in the mornings/afternoons to get their kids to the closest neighborhood school.
Anonymous wrote:We already have a hybrid of neighborhood and lottery. Roughly 25% of the kids in public education in DC attend neighborhood schools as a matter of right, the other 75% attend schools they won a space in the lottery at.
Anonymous wrote:Of the DCPS schools, I believe that Stuart Hobson had a wait list that not all students were admitted.
don't forget the charter middle schools, which on your list would join Hardy as a "lottery". Basis, Cap City, Washington Latin, 2 Rivers, EL Haynes, I would guess all had more 5th / 6th graders interested than they were able to enroll.
In a couple years, DCI will also be "lottery".
Anonymous wrote:Agree, I think it would irreparably harm the school system to do city wide lottery, even if only for MS and HS. I also highly doubt they would take this approach. But I wouldn't be surprised if some super complicated hybrid of in boundary and lottery spots was attempted.
Anonymous wrote:When you bought wotp you put a bet on the status quo, when I bought in Petworth I put a bet on change. We both took risks. Neither of us have rights to a particular set of boundaries. They are politically defined and thus subject to change.