Anonymous wrote:Not well. She died in 1931.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Current parent of a 6th grader at Ida B. Wells and we've been happy all year even with DL. (Obviously not an ideal situation) Teachers have been responsive and challenging students. They've done outreach to student homes just for fun to drop of things throughout the year and there has been a lot of joy! Community meetings on Wednesdays. Challenging courses and an intervention block. My child has enjoyed the SEM model a lot (its the first time we've experience that).
Thank you for this! I hope you get to enjoy the full Wells experience in person this fall!
+1, thanks PP. We’re at a Wells feeder and always interested in hearing parent perspectives about the school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Current parent of a 6th grader at Ida B. Wells and we've been happy all year even with DL. (Obviously not an ideal situation) Teachers have been responsive and challenging students. They've done outreach to student homes just for fun to drop of things throughout the year and there has been a lot of joy! Community meetings on Wednesdays. Challenging courses and an intervention block. My child has enjoyed the SEM model a lot (its the first time we've experience that).
Thank you for this! I hope you get to enjoy the full Wells experience in person this fall!
Anonymous wrote:Current parent of a 6th grader at Ida B. Wells and we've been happy all year even with DL. (Obviously not an ideal situation) Teachers have been responsive and challenging students. They've done outreach to student homes just for fun to drop of things throughout the year and there has been a lot of joy! Community meetings on Wednesdays. Challenging courses and an intervention block. My child has enjoyed the SEM model a lot (its the first time we've experience that).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The SEM model is based out of UCONN Teag School.
At Wells (and some other schools in DC) the enrichment cluster is something you select based on your interests. Teachers choose what they want to do (all of Wells' have a social justice component) and then the students get to hear about all of the choices and pick the one they are most interested in. There were choices on everything from sports to video games to cooking and more!
My kids loved SEM at the elementary level. It allowed for some differentiation and project based learning.
To the current parent, has your kid experienced differentiation? SEM sounds terrific, just wondering about the benefits in practice.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The SEM model is based out of UCONN Teag School.
At Wells (and some other schools in DC) the enrichment cluster is something you select based on your interests. Teachers choose what they want to do (all of Wells' have a social justice component) and then the students get to hear about all of the choices and pick the one they are most interested in. There were choices on everything from sports to video games to cooking and more!
My kids loved SEM at the elementary level. It allowed for some differentiation and project based learning.
Anonymous wrote:The SEM model is based out of UCONN Teag School.
At Wells (and some other schools in DC) the enrichment cluster is something you select based on your interests. Teachers choose what they want to do (all of Wells' have a social justice component) and then the students get to hear about all of the choices and pick the one they are most interested in. There were choices on everything from sports to video games to cooking and more!
Anonymous wrote:Current parent of a 6th grader at Ida B. Wells and we've been happy all year even with DL. (Obviously not an ideal situation) Teachers have been responsive and challenging students. They've done outreach to student homes just for fun to drop of things throughout the year and there has been a lot of joy! Community meetings on Wednesdays. Challenging courses and an intervention block. My child has enjoyed the SEM model a lot (its the first time we've experience that).
Anonymous wrote:I assume Ida Wells will be 6th and 7th grade next year?