Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sending the middle schoolers at Adams to MacFarland and the middle schoolers at Francis Stevens to Cardozo would open up probably 15 more classrooms WOTP that could be used for PK, and better utilize the under-enrolled schools.
Moving art instruction in-house at the schools currently served by Fillmore would allow several more classrooms there.
Wards 2 and 3 just need to decide which they prefer and start lobbying for whatever they decide. Parents of 1 and 2 year olds would like there to be 20 more PK classrooms near them, and it can be done with minimal capital investment. Parents of older kids like Fillmore and their current assigned middle and high school. And the parents of older kids are easier to organize because they can work through existing PTAs and they aren't exhausted by taking care of babies. So it's a hard fight for the parents of younger kids to win. But it could easily be done if there were the will among constituents.
This is a dumb argument - Maybe when your kids are babies you think a year's worth of preschool is a big deal, but trust me that once your kids are actually in the school you will see that overcrowding, no lunch rooms, 27 kids in a class, no available seats in key high school classes, eating lunch at 10 a.m., overworked school counselors, classes too big for a teacher to adequately give written feedback, etc. etc. is a far far bigger deal. You want free PK3? It's all yours if you are willing to drive a couple of miles. Save your advocacy energy for the bigger challenges to come.
+1
I think the research is pretty consistent that PK3 provides marginal benefits for MC/UMC kids who are already exposed to language, museums, music, etc. It is a low priority because it doesn't provide much bang for the buck among that population. And because the real issues WOTP are related to overcrowding. Ward 3 has decided which it prefers--it prefers no PK3 in exchange for more space for K-5. No one cares except parents of toddlers, and they soon become parents of not-toddlers and don't care anymore.
+1, from a Ward 3 parent of a middle schooler and a high schooler. I cannot get worked up over the lack of preK 3 in upper NW. in fact, I have always thought that preK 3 and 4 was DCPS’s secret weapon in pulling educated families into struggling schools.
Can’t get worked up? You realize the cost of center based private PK3 is about $24,000/year in Ward 3. And the value of that money 15 years later is equivalent to a free year of college education. But that does not get you worked up?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sending the middle schoolers at Adams to MacFarland and the middle schoolers at Francis Stevens to Cardozo would open up probably 15 more classrooms WOTP that could be used for PK, and better utilize the under-enrolled schools.
Moving art instruction in-house at the schools currently served by Fillmore would allow several more classrooms there.
Wards 2 and 3 just need to decide which they prefer and start lobbying for whatever they decide. Parents of 1 and 2 year olds would like there to be 20 more PK classrooms near them, and it can be done with minimal capital investment. Parents of older kids like Fillmore and their current assigned middle and high school. And the parents of older kids are easier to organize because they can work through existing PTAs and they aren't exhausted by taking care of babies. So it's a hard fight for the parents of younger kids to win. But it could easily be done if there were the will among constituents.
This is a dumb argument - Maybe when your kids are babies you think a year's worth of preschool is a big deal, but trust me that once your kids are actually in the school you will see that overcrowding, no lunch rooms, 27 kids in a class, no available seats in key high school classes, eating lunch at 10 a.m., overworked school counselors, classes too big for a teacher to adequately give written feedback, etc. etc. is a far far bigger deal. You want free PK3? It's all yours if you are willing to drive a couple of miles. Save your advocacy energy for the bigger challenges to come.
+1
I think the research is pretty consistent that PK3 provides marginal benefits for MC/UMC kids who are already exposed to language, museums, music, etc. It is a low priority because it doesn't provide much bang for the buck among that population. And because the real issues WOTP are related to overcrowding. Ward 3 has decided which it prefers--it prefers no PK3 in exchange for more space for K-5. No one cares except parents of toddlers, and they soon become parents of not-toddlers and don't care anymore.
+1, from a Ward 3 parent of a middle schooler and a high schooler. I cannot get worked up over the lack of preK 3 in upper NW. in fact, I have always thought that preK 3 and 4 was DCPS’s secret weapon in pulling educated families into struggling schools.
Anonymous wrote:No. We won’t complain. We get $$ fir your kid enrolling.
Bring em’ in.
No one thinks you’ll stay
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There's no free PK-3 and limited PK-4 (space allowing - not by right) in Ward 3 because the funding to start PK in DC (law passed in 2008) was funded in part with federal funding from Head Start targeted to better education for low income children. Ten years ago virtually all schools EOTP were majority low income.
That said, the time may be coming that DC has the income to fund universal PK3. One could also fairly comment that the lack of PK3 in Ward 3 means PK3 spots EOTP are taken by families who will leave later for their in bounds school. There aren't sufficient seats to meet the demand for PK in all locations, but meanwhile home prices and taxes mean DC's revenue is going up, up, up.
DC's revenue is down this year, in part due to the shutdown. If you want PK3 in WOTP schools are you going to build additions to them (which costs a lot and takes away from the playing field and your kids will spend years in the swing space at Meyer) or are you going to shrink the boundaries so fewer people have rights to the more crowded schools WOTP?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sending the middle schoolers at Adams to MacFarland and the middle schoolers at Francis Stevens to Cardozo would open up probably 15 more classrooms WOTP that could be used for PK, and better utilize the under-enrolled schools.
Moving art instruction in-house at the schools currently served by Fillmore would allow several more classrooms there.
Wards 2 and 3 just need to decide which they prefer and start lobbying for whatever they decide. Parents of 1 and 2 year olds would like there to be 20 more PK classrooms near them, and it can be done with minimal capital investment. Parents of older kids like Fillmore and their current assigned middle and high school. And the parents of older kids are easier to organize because they can work through existing PTAs and they aren't exhausted by taking care of babies. So it's a hard fight for the parents of younger kids to win. But it could easily be done if there were the will among constituents.
This is a dumb argument - Maybe when your kids are babies you think a year's worth of preschool is a big deal, but trust me that once your kids are actually in the school you will see that overcrowding, no lunch rooms, 27 kids in a class, no available seats in key high school classes, eating lunch at 10 a.m., overworked school counselors, classes too big for a teacher to adequately give written feedback, etc. etc. is a far far bigger deal. You want free PK3? It's all yours if you are willing to drive a couple of miles. Save your advocacy energy for the bigger challenges to come.
+1
I think the research is pretty consistent that PK3 provides marginal benefits for MC/UMC kids who are already exposed to language, museums, music, etc. It is a low priority because it doesn't provide much bang for the buck among that population. And because the real issues WOTP are related to overcrowding. Ward 3 has decided which it prefers--it prefers no PK3 in exchange for more space for K-5. No one cares except parents of toddlers, and they soon become parents of not-toddlers and don't care anymore.
+1, from a Ward 3 parent of a middle schooler and a high schooler. I cannot get worked up over the lack of preK 3 in upper NW. in fact, I have always thought that preK 3 and 4 was DCPS’s secret weapon in pulling educated families into struggling schools.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sending the middle schoolers at Adams to MacFarland and the middle schoolers at Francis Stevens to Cardozo would open up probably 15 more classrooms WOTP that could be used for PK, and better utilize the under-enrolled schools.
Moving art instruction in-house at the schools currently served by Fillmore would allow several more classrooms there.
Wards 2 and 3 just need to decide which they prefer and start lobbying for whatever they decide. Parents of 1 and 2 year olds would like there to be 20 more PK classrooms near them, and it can be done with minimal capital investment. Parents of older kids like Fillmore and their current assigned middle and high school. And the parents of older kids are easier to organize because they can work through existing PTAs and they aren't exhausted by taking care of babies. So it's a hard fight for the parents of younger kids to win. But it could easily be done if there were the will among constituents.
This is a dumb argument - Maybe when your kids are babies you think a year's worth of preschool is a big deal, but trust me that once your kids are actually in the school you will see that overcrowding, no lunch rooms, 27 kids in a class, no available seats in key high school classes, eating lunch at 10 a.m., overworked school counselors, classes too big for a teacher to adequately give written feedback, etc. etc. is a far far bigger deal. You want free PK3? It's all yours if you are willing to drive a couple of miles. Save your advocacy energy for the bigger challenges to come.
+1
I think the research is pretty consistent that PK3 provides marginal benefits for MC/UMC kids who are already exposed to language, museums, music, etc. It is a low priority because it doesn't provide much bang for the buck among that population. And because the real issues WOTP are related to overcrowding. Ward 3 has decided which it prefers--it prefers no PK3 in exchange for more space for K-5. No one cares except parents of toddlers, and they soon become parents of not-toddlers and don't care anymore.
Anonymous wrote:There's no free PK-3 and limited PK-4 (space allowing - not by right) in Ward 3 because the funding to start PK in DC (law passed in 2008) was funded in part with federal funding from Head Start targeted to better education for low income children. Ten years ago virtually all schools EOTP were majority low income.
That said, the time may be coming that DC has the income to fund universal PK3. One could also fairly comment that the lack of PK3 in Ward 3 means PK3 spots EOTP are taken by families who will leave later for their in bounds school. There aren't sufficient seats to meet the demand for PK in all locations, but meanwhile home prices and taxes mean DC's revenue is going up, up, up.
Anonymous wrote:Ok, but Ward 3 kids can go to preschool in not ward 3 schools, right?
I have worked at a few schools in NE and they always have free spots.
Op, are you willing to take your kid to a school off of Benning Road?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ward 3, y’all gettin played. No summer school programs, no charters, no PS-3, no outdoor pools, and overcrowded MS/HS schools with kids from all eight wards. Keep sending in those taxes though!
Love,
The Rest of the City
Summers are for traveling and being at home doing nothing. Don't care about any of the charters. Went to see something Latin on military road many many years ago, what a dump it was.
We have a heated pool that opens mid May and is 2 minute walk from our front door.
Hardy is hardly overcrowded and DC thrives in crowds.
Getting a tax refund yet again. All I paid comes back and more. Oh, and other kids had people waiting to sign them up for summer program located in another DCPS.
We will skip Europe this year but will definitely go next year.
Going nowhere from ward 3.
It wouldn't be DCUM without a post reeking of privilege and lacking self-awareness.
-Ward 4 parent who is thrilled not to have to interact with many Ward 3 parents like PP.
Don't worry Ward 4 Parent, Ward 3 up there is probably a poser with a hideous LV knockoff bag and here's how I know:
1.) Europe is SO basic
2.) Real ballers don't get that excited about tax refunds
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ward 3, y’all gettin played. No summer school programs, no charters, no PS-3, no outdoor pools, and overcrowded MS/HS schools with kids from all eight wards. Keep sending in those taxes though!
Love,
The Rest of the City
Summers are for traveling and being at home doing nothing. Don't care about any of the charters. Went to see something Latin on military road many many years ago, what a dump it was.
We have a heated pool that opens mid May and is 2 minute walk from our front door.
Hardy is hardly overcrowded and DC thrives in crowds.
Getting a tax refund yet again. All I paid comes back and more. Oh, and other kids had people waiting to sign them up for summer program located in another DCPS.
We will skip Europe this year but will definitely go next year.
Going nowhere from ward 3.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ward 3, y’all gettin played. No summer school programs, no charters, no PS-3, no outdoor pools, and overcrowded MS/HS schools with kids from all eight wards. Keep sending in those taxes though!
Love,
The Rest of the City
Summers are for traveling and being at home doing nothing. Don't care about any of the charters. Went to see something Latin on military road many many years ago, what a dump it was.
We have a heated pool that opens mid May and is 2 minute walk from our front door.
Hardy is hardly overcrowded and DC thrives in crowds.
Getting a tax refund yet again. All I paid comes back and more. Oh, and other kids had people waiting to sign them up for summer program located in another DCPS.
We will skip Europe this year but will definitely go next year.
Going nowhere from ward 3.
