Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't think they studied this, but I would support a system that first gave preference to at risk kids whose sibling(s) attend the school and then to other at risk kids.
I wouldn't want the good goal of at-risk preferences to make more at-risk families face situations where siblings would be split up.
Requiring schools with low at-risk percentages to back-fill their classes throughout the year and in every grade would also make a huge difference. There is no reason why Ross, for example, can just choose not to take kids and wind up with a 12-student 5th grade.
Maybe not Ross, but it does make a huge difference at Mann or Murch, because then all of a sudden you are exploding Wilson High School even further.
Change the OOB slots to at risk slots? Fine. Add at risk on top of OOB slots? Disaster.
I'm not saying at-risk on top of OOB. I'm saying that schools should have full classes (DCPS can set a number that is "full"--let's say 22 kids in grades 3-5). If it's the first week of school and Janney's 4th grade classes are 22, 22, 22, and 18 students, take 4 kids off the waitlist and give at-risk kids a preference for those seats.
I get your point about overcrowding at Wilson. My solution to that would be that OOB kids (at risk or not) lose the right to attend the destination schools. So if 4 kids got into 4th grade at Janney OOB, they don't get to go to Deal unless they win the lottery for Deal. Deal is only 70% in-bounds now. They can offer the extra 30% of seats in the lottery, again with an at-risk preference (maybe for half the seats). There could even be a feeder school preference so that some kid would get to stay with their friends. And Wilson is 56% IB. So again there is room for all the IB kids and a group of OOB ones without overcrowding the school at all, as long as OOB kids' right to attend destination schools is curtailed.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Define affluent.
I'm not sure what they would use. But you could do a household income cutoff. Or just say everyone who's not at-risk, which is really quite far from affluent for most people, but whatever.
40% of DC students are at risk of academic failure (defined as receiving TANF, SNAP, in the foster care system, homeless or in high school and a year or more older than the expected grade).
80% are economically disadvantaged (qualify for FARMS); obviously there is overlap with the at-risk category.
Tbe 20% that does not meet either of the above definitions are, relatively speaking, affluent.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't think they studied this, but I would support a system that first gave preference to at risk kids whose sibling(s) attend the school and then to other at risk kids.
I wouldn't want the good goal of at-risk preferences to make more at-risk families face situations where siblings would be split up.
Requiring schools with low at-risk percentages to back-fill their classes throughout the year and in every grade would also make a huge difference. There is no reason why Ross, for example, can just choose not to take kids and wind up with a 12-student 5th grade.
Maybe not Ross, but it does make a huge difference at Mann or Murch, because then all of a sudden you are exploding Wilson High School even further.
Change the OOB slots to at risk slots? Fine. Add at risk on top of OOB slots? Disaster.
I'm not saying at-risk on top of OOB. I'm saying that schools should have full classes (DCPS can set a number that is "full"--let's say 22 kids in grades 3-5). If it's the first week of school and Janney's 4th grade classes are 22, 22, 22, and 18 students, take 4 kids off the waitlist and give at-risk kids a preference for those seats.
I get your point about overcrowding at Wilson. My solution to that would be that OOB kids (at risk or not) lose the right to attend the destination schools. So if 4 kids got into 4th grade at Janney OOB, they don't get to go to Deal unless they win the lottery for Deal. Deal is only 70% in-bounds now. They can offer the extra 30% of seats in the lottery, again with an at-risk preference (maybe for half the seats). There could even be a feeder school preference so that some kid would get to stay with their friends. And Wilson is 56% IB. So again there is room for all the IB kids and a group of OOB ones without overcrowding the school at all, as long as OOB kids' right to attend destination schools is curtailed.
Anonymous wrote:One of the points of that Twitter posting that stood out to me is that at risk kids are far less likely to enter the lottery at all (more than 40% of all kids are at risk, but way less than 40% of lottery applicants. That confirms what I've thought about charter schools not taking their "fair share" of the most difficult to educate students, and so any comparison of outcomes isn't fair. It also suggests that providing access to quality schools for at risk kids has to be done outside the lottery system.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Isn't that basically what Boston does?
What does Boston do? Anyone know?
Looks like you get a set of choices based on your address for K-8, and you can lottery for city wide choices as well. All high schools are city-wide and you access via a lottery; some high school have other entrance requirements.
https://www.bostonpublicschools.org/assignment
https://www.bostonpublicschools.org/Page/7080
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Isn't that basically what Boston does?
What does Boston do? Anyone know?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Define affluent.
I'm not sure what they would use. But you could do a household income cutoff. Or just say everyone who's not at-risk, which is really quite far from affluent for most people, but whatever.
The problem with that is then the other kids arrive IB for K and now you need 8 kindergartens at Janney.
?? So don't have such a big preschool program.
Wasn't the whole point of the silly exercise to figure out how to get more at risk kids into preK?
Anonymous wrote:Isn't that basically what Boston does?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Define affluent.
I'm not sure what they would use. But you could do a household income cutoff. Or just say everyone who's not at-risk, which is really quite far from affluent for most people, but whatever.
The problem with that is then the other kids arrive IB for K and now you need 8 kindergartens at Janney.
?? So don't have such a big preschool program.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Define affluent.
I'm not sure what they would use. But you could do a household income cutoff. Or just say everyone who's not at-risk, which is really quite far from affluent for most people, but whatever.
The problem with that is then the other kids arrive IB for K and now you need 8 kindergartens at Janney.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Define affluent.
I'm not sure what they would use. But you could do a household income cutoff. Or just say everyone who's not at-risk, which is really quite far from affluent for most people, but whatever.
The problem with that is then the other kids arrive IB for K and now you need 8 kindergartens at Janney.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Define affluent.
I'm not sure what they would use. But you could do a household income cutoff. Or just say everyone who's not at-risk, which is really quite far from affluent for most people, but whatever.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think that would kill a lot of charters that don’t already have a high FARMS population.
If having a modest increase in the number of at-risk kids is all it takes to "kill" a charter, good riddance. My kid's school is expected to deal with a majority at-risk population and we find a way.
Anonymous wrote:I think that would kill a lot of charters that don’t already have a high FARMS population.