Anonymous wrote:The same plan that's going to renovate Roosevelt for 120 million for less than 500 students. Gotta love DCPS---meanwhile NO charter can be test-in or exclude anyone. Utter bullshit.
Anonymous wrote:Thought this was an interesting article in the question of selective schools and the history of Dunbar.
Learning Why the Caged Bird Sings
First Class: The Legacy of Dunbar, America’s First Black Public High School
by Alison Stewart
Chicago Review Press, 2013, $26.95, 352 pages
The story of DC’s Dunbar High School, told brilliantly by Alison Stewart in First Class, is equal parts uplifting and maddening.
The school’s story from its opening in 1870 to the 1960s is a testament to the indomitable spirit of the African-American community of the District at that time. Though relegated to second-class status and stifled at every turn, Dunbar produced a coterie of graduates that the most elite schools in the country would envy. Doctors, lawyers, Ivy League professors, generals, and titans of business all graced and were graced by Dunbar’s faculty and community
http://educationnext.org/learning-why-the-caged-bird-sings/
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't think this is all about Black and White, although there are quite a few White folks in this town who thinks it is all about them and them only.
I reposted that so everyone could read it again.
Reposting it won't make it any more true. Sure, people are looking out for themselves but they aren't looking out for "them only". Improving a school to benefit them will also benefit anyone else who comes along.
It was its ridiculousness and jaw-dropping lack of self-awareness, not its truthiness, that led me to repost.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Bad investment. Invest in entirely new spaces much much larger than enrollment? An enrollment that won't increase until population increases starting now roll up to AGE 14!???! So these places will have 10 years useful life wasted below capacity. What does that add up to besides millions of waste, literally wasted space?
We should have built the new mega schools 10 years from now, not today. Modernize square footage needed for current enrollments, but no 100% new schools until the places start to actually fit growth. DC lost student age population in wide swathes 2000-2010. This was predictable and could have been planned for!
+1. Enrollment is decreasing in DCPS and no one who has an alternative and/or care about education will send their kid to Dunbar High School. DCPS is remarkable on how they throw money into the wind... Now they have a gorgeous facility utilized at less than 1/2 capacity. Who plans like this?!?
Dunbar is not Los Vegas or Disneyland. Just b/c you build it, doesn't mean people will come.

Anonymous wrote:Bad investment. Invest in entirely new spaces much much larger than enrollment? An enrollment that won't increase until population increases starting now roll up to AGE 14!???! So these places will have 10 years useful life wasted below capacity. What does that add up to besides millions of waste, literally wasted space?
We should have built the new mega schools 10 years from now, not today. Modernize square footage needed for current enrollments, but no 100% new schools until the places start to actually fit growth. DC lost student age population in wide swathes 2000-2010. This was predictable and could have been planned for!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't think this is all about Black and White, although there are quite a few White folks in this town who thinks it is all about them and them only.
I reposted that so everyone could read it again.
Reposting it won't make it any more true. Sure, people are looking out for themselves but they aren't looking out for "them only". Improving a school to benefit them will also benefit anyone else who comes along.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't think this is all about Black and White, although there are quite a few White folks in this town who thinks it is all about them and them only.
I reposted that so everyone could read it again.
Anonymous wrote:OK, tell me which one gets the new smaller building, in addition to the $122 million new Dunbar?
The majority of Dunbar students that the principal doesn't want, or the minority who would be eligible for Magnet Dunbar?
Again, where will the kids who live inside the attendance zone go to school?
Anonymous wrote:I don't think this is all about Black and White, although there are quite a few White folks in this town who thinks it is all about them and them only.
Anonymous wrote:The problem is what to do with the children that the neighborhood schools send - they live geographically nearby and are the most likely feeders in all cases and are not academically prepared for the success the principal and alumni apparently dream of. I love that the principal especially is dreaming himself into a promotion from Dunbar Remedial High School into Dunbar Selective Prep.
The local students NEED A PLACE TO GO TO SCHOOL. Magnets are wonderful, but WHERE WILL THE LOCAL KIDS CONTINUE TO GO FOR HIGH SCHOOL?