Anonymous wrote:How could anyone NOT get in when F-S is under-enrolled?
yes, and it has always been a wildly unpopular idea to the SWW community.Anonymous wrote:The principal at sww has always had his eyes on FS as a space for his students as they are outgrowing their facilities at the high school. He was a part of several closed door meetings for years before this became a public discussion
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do yo think they will close FS but expand SWW?
F-S should become a magnet school, just like Walls. Create proficiency or near-proficiency as an admission requirement, and it would become a great school, and enrolled close to capacity for the first time in the 21st century.
???? - (DUHHH !?!?) Its almost like saying 2+2=4. Any school with admission requirement will become a great school and get the attention of parents that frequent this forum and parents that don"t want to sacrifice our kids to see if it is possible to really turn around a school without displacing the "undesirables."
Francis-Stevens will follow the path carved by charters. I don't think you have to go the magnet route...parents will self-select by their willingness to cart their children across town for a decent program. Those that can't get in through lottery or open seats will woo the principal with their 'influence' as seen at other schools in this neighborhood.
Wait, isn't F-S a low-proficiency school right now? What motivation do parents have to cart their kids over there, now or in the near future, without some incentive?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do yo think they will close FS but expand SWW?
F-S should become a magnet school, just like Walls. Create proficiency or near-proficiency as an admission requirement, and it would become a great school, and enrolled close to capacity for the first time in the 21st century.
???? - (DUHHH !?!?) Its almost like saying 2+2=4. Any school with admission requirement will become a great school and get the attention of parents that frequent this forum and parents that don"t want to sacrifice our kids to see if it is possible to really turn around a school without displacing the "undesirables."
Francis-Stevens will follow the path carved by charters. I don't think you have to go the magnet route...parents will self-select by their willingness to cart their children across town for a decent program. Those that can't get in through lottery or open seats will woo the principal with their 'influence' as seen at other schools in this neighborhood.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do yo think they will close FS but expand SWW?
F-S should become a magnet school, just like Walls. Create proficiency or near-proficiency as an admission requirement, and it would become a great school, and enrolled close to capacity for the first time in the 21st century.
???? - (DUHHH !?!?) Its almost like saying 2+2=4. Any school with admission requirement will become a great school and get the attention of parents that frequent this forum and parents that don"t want to sacrifice our kids to see if it is possible to really turn around a school without displacing the "undesirables."
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do yo think they will close FS but expand SWW?
F-S should become a magnet school, just like Walls. Create proficiency or near-proficiency as an admission requirement, and it would become a great school, and enrolled close to capacity for the first time in the 21st century.
Anonymous wrote:Do yo think they will close FS but expand SWW?
Anonymous wrote:The principal at sww has always had his eyes on FS as a space for his students as they are outgrowing their facilities at the high school. He was a part of several closed door meetings for years before this became a public discussion
Anonymous wrote:The principal at sww has always had his eyes on FS as a space for his students as they are outgrowing their facilities at the high school. He was a part of several closed door meetings for years before this became a public discussion
Anonymous wrote:This "plan" seems crazy. Isn't one a magnet school requiring academic testing to get it, and the other a neighborhood school with very few in-boundary kids in attendance. I know FS attracts a lot in the PS because it is one of the very few such programs in the area, but how is there retention rate? Are the projected demographics change in Foggy Bottom sufficient to justify this as a neighhborhood middle school?