Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wait, the Woodward people are now trying to make the rest of us pay millions for renovations to Edison for extra classrooms for Wheaton, because they think there's something so terrible about a 30% FARMS rate that they should take valuable money out of the budget for other schools to make sure they don't have to deal with it?
Umm nope. Either Woodward or WJ. Not Wheaton.
Not true, it's woodward or wheaton for wheaton woods eliminary.
Wheaton PTA wants it to stay with Wheaton. Farmland wants to boot VM to WJ because it would be silly to make an island to WJ from Wheaton Woods, but VM wants to stay at Woodward. WJ PTA therefore wants to put Wheaton Woods back to Wheaton. So there's an alliance between WJ PTA and Wheaton in that regard. Let wheaton be over crowded. But i think they'll end up at Woodward.
No that’s entirely wrong. Balance between WJ and Woodward, WW to Woodward and VM to WJ.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wait, the Woodward people are now trying to make the rest of us pay millions for renovations to Edison for extra classrooms for Wheaton, because they think there's something so terrible about a 30% FARMS rate that they should take valuable money out of the budget for other schools to make sure they don't have to deal with it?
Umm nope. Either Woodward or WJ. Not Wheaton.
Not true, it's woodward or wheaton for wheaton woods eliminary.
Wheaton PTA wants it to stay with Wheaton. Farmland wants to boot VM to WJ because it would be silly to make an island to WJ from Wheaton Woods, but VM wants to stay at Woodward. WJ PTA therefore wants to put Wheaton Woods back to Wheaton. So there's an alliance between WJ PTA and Wheaton in that regard. Let wheaton be over crowded. But i think they'll end up at Woodward.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Seems a proposal to shift back to the original option B may go further. That option was prepared and presented in detail and got positive feedback from the community.
Going back to option B means sending WW back to overcrowded Wheaton, right? And reversing a bunch of un-related changes in Silver Spring? That doesn't make any sense. Why would they propose that rather than just switching the boundaries between WJ and Woodward?
Easiest is to simply swap ES area in WJ and Woodward.
Farmland into Wheaton or Kennedy would have a greater balancing effect on FARMs. And they can show just how genuine their sentiments are.
Say it louder for the people in the back! Let’s bus the wealthy white families to Wheaton to satisfy their complaints.
Yes! Bus the whites to Kennedy and Wheaton...oh wait, isn't that what the regional program is? Put the IB and Math/Science/Engineering program in the ghetto....aka bus the high performing whites (and asian americans) to MS13 territory
Wheaton will continue to have their STEM magnet which is certainly not in the ghetto as you describe. It’s a popular program and part of why Wheaton is currently so overcrowded.
Wheaton gets the Edison seats/capacity too!
Enter: Dude who says the seats are phantom at Edison and not real for Wheaton. ::insert his/her typical rant::
You found me. Can you explain in clear terms how those 500 seats materialized? I've asked MCPS and here on DCUM and nobody can answer how they will continue to offer parttime Edison programs to students countywide and add 500 full time seats for resident Wheaton students to Edison which does not currently confer high school diplomas.
Sounds like you support the Superintendent's recommendation? Is that the sentiment in the broader Wheaton cluster?
No, I am not in the Wheaton or proposed WJ/Woodward clusters. I think it would be better to balance FARMS between Woodward and WJ because that is what would be best for the kids. But I don't expect Taylor or the BOE to do this, and I kind of get it, it's certainly not a magic bullet. I am frustrated that I don't see any urgency on their part in terms of improving outcomes for low income kids and this feels like low hanging fruit.
Wrt Wheaton capacity I am concerned as a taxpayer that they are promising capacity that doesn't exist and requires more spending to create. Spending that there is no money for. There is plenty of capacity in the existing buildings, and the entire purpose of the boundary study is to use that capacity, so they should do it. Even the Superintendent's recommendation leaves Wheaton somewhat over capacity. At the proposed utilization level I can kind of buy that some of that will be relieved by students attending Edison part time, but it's still insane to me they aren't doing more to relieve Wheaton. People will be angry in the short term and then they will get used to the new boundaries and be fine.
Two things:
1. you ignore the regional model will balance kids out between the 4 schools in the region.
2. you expect utopia or perfection. that won't happen and can't happen due to logistical challenges and increased expense.
1. Do they plan to use the regional model to balance utilization by luring relatively rich and well resourced kids from Wheaton to WJ? That is terrible idea. It is also not something they have been transparent about.
2. I don't expect utopia. Notice I am not expecting them to bus Farmland kids to Kennedy. I think it is extremely ridiculous that was in an option in the first place. Expecting them to use their existing facilities efficiently so as not to need to spend more money constructing more seats they don't need is not only not asking for perfection, it is simply asking for basic common sense.
Yes, that's what magnets do. They send white kids into the bad neighborhoods...or at least less desirable neighborhoods with more minorities. It's been that way since the 80s
The theory of magnets has always been to put magnets at lower-SES schools to attract more high-achieving students there and provide stronger options at the lower-SES school than it would otherwise have.
MCPS's bold new vision is to put magnets at high-SES schools to pull high-achieving students out of the poorer schools and give the already well-resourced schools even more and better classes while the poorer schools get worse.
Wrong wrong wrong wrong wrong on your second point. Wheaton has the Math/Science magnet and Kennedy as the IB magnet!!! Woodwards arts magnet is NOT desirable.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Seems a proposal to shift back to the original option B may go further. That option was prepared and presented in detail and got positive feedback from the community.
Going back to option B means sending WW back to overcrowded Wheaton, right? And reversing a bunch of un-related changes in Silver Spring? That doesn't make any sense. Why would they propose that rather than just switching the boundaries between WJ and Woodward?
Easiest is to simply swap ES area in WJ and Woodward.
Farmland into Wheaton or Kennedy would have a greater balancing effect on FARMs. And they can show just how genuine their sentiments are.
Say it louder for the people in the back! Let’s bus the wealthy white families to Wheaton to satisfy their complaints.
Yes! Bus the whites to Kennedy and Wheaton...oh wait, isn't that what the regional program is? Put the IB and Math/Science/Engineering program in the ghetto....aka bus the high performing whites (and asian americans) to MS13 territory
Wheaton will continue to have their STEM magnet which is certainly not in the ghetto as you describe. It’s a popular program and part of why Wheaton is currently so overcrowded.
Wheaton gets the Edison seats/capacity too!
Enter: Dude who says the seats are phantom at Edison and not real for Wheaton. ::insert his/her typical rant::
You found me. Can you explain in clear terms how those 500 seats materialized? I've asked MCPS and here on DCUM and nobody can answer how they will continue to offer parttime Edison programs to students countywide and add 500 full time seats for resident Wheaton students to Edison which does not currently confer high school diplomas.
Sounds like you support the Superintendent's recommendation? Is that the sentiment in the broader Wheaton cluster?
No, I am not in the Wheaton or proposed WJ/Woodward clusters. I think it would be better to balance FARMS between Woodward and WJ because that is what would be best for the kids. But I don't expect Taylor or the BOE to do this, and I kind of get it, it's certainly not a magic bullet. I am frustrated that I don't see any urgency on their part in terms of improving outcomes for low income kids and this feels like low hanging fruit.
Wrt Wheaton capacity I am concerned as a taxpayer that they are promising capacity that doesn't exist and requires more spending to create. Spending that there is no money for. There is plenty of capacity in the existing buildings, and the entire purpose of the boundary study is to use that capacity, so they should do it. Even the Superintendent's recommendation leaves Wheaton somewhat over capacity. At the proposed utilization level I can kind of buy that some of that will be relieved by students attending Edison part time, but it's still insane to me they aren't doing more to relieve Wheaton. People will be angry in the short term and then they will get used to the new boundaries and be fine.
Two things:
1. you ignore the regional model will balance kids out between the 4 schools in the region.
2. you expect utopia or perfection. that won't happen and can't happen due to logistical challenges and increased expense.
1. Do they plan to use the regional model to balance utilization by luring relatively rich and well resourced kids from Wheaton to WJ? That is terrible idea. It is also not something they have been transparent about.
2. I don't expect utopia. Notice I am not expecting them to bus Farmland kids to Kennedy. I think it is extremely ridiculous that was in an option in the first place. Expecting them to use their existing facilities efficiently so as not to need to spend more money constructing more seats they don't need is not only not asking for perfection, it is simply asking for basic common sense.
Yes, that's what magnets do. They send white kids into the bad neighborhoods...or at least less desirable neighborhoods with more minorities. It's been that way since the 80s
The theory of magnets has always been to put magnets at lower-SES schools to attract more high-achieving students there and provide stronger options at the lower-SES school than it would otherwise have.
MCPS's bold new vision is to put magnets at high-SES schools to pull high-achieving students out of the poorer schools and give the already well-resourced schools even more and better classes while the poorer schools get worse.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wait, the Woodward people are now trying to make the rest of us pay millions for renovations to Edison for extra classrooms for Wheaton, because they think there's something so terrible about a 30% FARMS rate that they should take valuable money out of the budget for other schools to make sure they don't have to deal with it?
Umm nope. Either Woodward or WJ. Not Wheaton.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Seems a proposal to shift back to the original option B may go further. That option was prepared and presented in detail and got positive feedback from the community.
Going back to option B means sending WW back to overcrowded Wheaton, right? And reversing a bunch of un-related changes in Silver Spring? That doesn't make any sense. Why would they propose that rather than just switching the boundaries between WJ and Woodward?
Easiest is to simply swap ES area in WJ and Woodward.
Farmland into Wheaton or Kennedy would have a greater balancing effect on FARMs. And they can show just how genuine their sentiments are.
Say it louder for the people in the back! Let’s bus the wealthy white families to Wheaton to satisfy their complaints.
Yes! Bus the whites to Kennedy and Wheaton...oh wait, isn't that what the regional program is? Put the IB and Math/Science/Engineering program in the ghetto....aka bus the high performing whites (and asian americans) to MS13 territory
Wheaton will continue to have their STEM magnet which is certainly not in the ghetto as you describe. It’s a popular program and part of why Wheaton is currently so overcrowded.
Wheaton gets the Edison seats/capacity too!
Enter: Dude who says the seats are phantom at Edison and not real for Wheaton. ::insert his/her typical rant::
You found me. Can you explain in clear terms how those 500 seats materialized? I've asked MCPS and here on DCUM and nobody can answer how they will continue to offer parttime Edison programs to students countywide and add 500 full time seats for resident Wheaton students to Edison which does not currently confer high school diplomas.
Sounds like you support the Superintendent's recommendation? Is that the sentiment in the broader Wheaton cluster?
No, I am not in the Wheaton or proposed WJ/Woodward clusters. I think it would be better to balance FARMS between Woodward and WJ because that is what would be best for the kids. But I don't expect Taylor or the BOE to do this, and I kind of get it, it's certainly not a magic bullet. I am frustrated that I don't see any urgency on their part in terms of improving outcomes for low income kids and this feels like low hanging fruit.
Wrt Wheaton capacity I am concerned as a taxpayer that they are promising capacity that doesn't exist and requires more spending to create. Spending that there is no money for. There is plenty of capacity in the existing buildings, and the entire purpose of the boundary study is to use that capacity, so they should do it. Even the Superintendent's recommendation leaves Wheaton somewhat over capacity. At the proposed utilization level I can kind of buy that some of that will be relieved by students attending Edison part time, but it's still insane to me they aren't doing more to relieve Wheaton. People will be angry in the short term and then they will get used to the new boundaries and be fine.
Two things:
1. you ignore the regional model will balance kids out between the 4 schools in the region.
2. you expect utopia or perfection. that won't happen and can't happen due to logistical challenges and increased expense.
1. Do they plan to use the regional model to balance utilization by luring relatively rich and well resourced kids from Wheaton to WJ? That is terrible idea. It is also not something they have been transparent about.
2. I don't expect utopia. Notice I am not expecting them to bus Farmland kids to Kennedy. I think it is extremely ridiculous that was in an option in the first place. Expecting them to use their existing facilities efficiently so as not to need to spend more money constructing more seats they don't need is not only not asking for perfection, it is simply asking for basic common sense.
Yes, that's what magnets do. They send white kids into the bad neighborhoods...or at least less desirable neighborhoods with more minorities. It's been that way since the 80s
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Seems a proposal to shift back to the original option B may go further. That option was prepared and presented in detail and got positive feedback from the community.
Going back to option B means sending WW back to overcrowded Wheaton, right? And reversing a bunch of un-related changes in Silver Spring? That doesn't make any sense. Why would they propose that rather than just switching the boundaries between WJ and Woodward?
Easiest is to simply swap ES area in WJ and Woodward.
Farmland into Wheaton or Kennedy would have a greater balancing effect on FARMs. And they can show just how genuine their sentiments are.
Say it louder for the people in the back! Let’s bus the wealthy white families to Wheaton to satisfy their complaints.
Yes! Bus the whites to Kennedy and Wheaton...oh wait, isn't that what the regional program is? Put the IB and Math/Science/Engineering program in the ghetto....aka bus the high performing whites (and asian americans) to MS13 territory
Wheaton will continue to have their STEM magnet which is certainly not in the ghetto as you describe. It’s a popular program and part of why Wheaton is currently so overcrowded.
Wheaton gets the Edison seats/capacity too!
Enter: Dude who says the seats are phantom at Edison and not real for Wheaton. ::insert his/her typical rant::
You found me. Can you explain in clear terms how those 500 seats materialized? I've asked MCPS and here on DCUM and nobody can answer how they will continue to offer parttime Edison programs to students countywide and add 500 full time seats for resident Wheaton students to Edison which does not currently confer high school diplomas.
Sounds like you support the Superintendent's recommendation? Is that the sentiment in the broader Wheaton cluster?
No, I am not in the Wheaton or proposed WJ/Woodward clusters. I think it would be better to balance FARMS between Woodward and WJ because that is what would be best for the kids. But I don't expect Taylor or the BOE to do this, and I kind of get it, it's certainly not a magic bullet. I am frustrated that I don't see any urgency on their part in terms of improving outcomes for low income kids and this feels like low hanging fruit.
Wrt Wheaton capacity I am concerned as a taxpayer that they are promising capacity that doesn't exist and requires more spending to create. Spending that there is no money for. There is plenty of capacity in the existing buildings, and the entire purpose of the boundary study is to use that capacity, so they should do it. Even the Superintendent's recommendation leaves Wheaton somewhat over capacity. At the proposed utilization level I can kind of buy that some of that will be relieved by students attending Edison part time, but it's still insane to me they aren't doing more to relieve Wheaton. People will be angry in the short term and then they will get used to the new boundaries and be fine.
Two things:
1. you ignore the regional model will balance kids out between the 4 schools in the region.
2. you expect utopia or perfection. that won't happen and can't happen due to logistical challenges and increased expense.
1. Do they plan to use the regional model to balance utilization by luring relatively rich and well resourced kids from Wheaton to WJ? That is terrible idea. It is also not something they have been transparent about.
2. I don't expect utopia. Notice I am not expecting them to bus Farmland kids to Kennedy. I think it is extremely ridiculous that was in an option in the first place. Expecting them to use their existing facilities efficiently so as not to need to spend more money constructing more seats they don't need is not only not asking for perfection, it is simply asking for basic common sense.
Yes, that's what magnets do. They send white kids into the bad neighborhoods...or at least less desirable neighborhoods with more minorities. It's been that way since the 80s
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Seems a proposal to shift back to the original option B may go further. That option was prepared and presented in detail and got positive feedback from the community.
Going back to option B means sending WW back to overcrowded Wheaton, right? And reversing a bunch of un-related changes in Silver Spring? That doesn't make any sense. Why would they propose that rather than just switching the boundaries between WJ and Woodward?
Easiest is to simply swap ES area in WJ and Woodward.
Farmland into Wheaton or Kennedy would have a greater balancing effect on FARMs. And they can show just how genuine their sentiments are.
Say it louder for the people in the back! Let’s bus the wealthy white families to Wheaton to satisfy their complaints.
Yes! Bus the whites to Kennedy and Wheaton...oh wait, isn't that what the regional program is? Put the IB and Math/Science/Engineering program in the ghetto....aka bus the high performing whites (and asian americans) to MS13 territory
Wheaton will continue to have their STEM magnet which is certainly not in the ghetto as you describe. It’s a popular program and part of why Wheaton is currently so overcrowded.
Wheaton gets the Edison seats/capacity too!
Enter: Dude who says the seats are phantom at Edison and not real for Wheaton. ::insert his/her typical rant::
You found me. Can you explain in clear terms how those 500 seats materialized? I've asked MCPS and here on DCUM and nobody can answer how they will continue to offer parttime Edison programs to students countywide and add 500 full time seats for resident Wheaton students to Edison which does not currently confer high school diplomas.
Sounds like you support the Superintendent's recommendation? Is that the sentiment in the broader Wheaton cluster?
No, I am not in the Wheaton or proposed WJ/Woodward clusters. I think it would be better to balance FARMS between Woodward and WJ because that is what would be best for the kids. But I don't expect Taylor or the BOE to do this, and I kind of get it, it's certainly not a magic bullet. I am frustrated that I don't see any urgency on their part in terms of improving outcomes for low income kids and this feels like low hanging fruit.
Wrt Wheaton capacity I am concerned as a taxpayer that they are promising capacity that doesn't exist and requires more spending to create. Spending that there is no money for. There is plenty of capacity in the existing buildings, and the entire purpose of the boundary study is to use that capacity, so they should do it. Even the Superintendent's recommendation leaves Wheaton somewhat over capacity. At the proposed utilization level I can kind of buy that some of that will be relieved by students attending Edison part time, but it's still insane to me they aren't doing more to relieve Wheaton. People will be angry in the short term and then they will get used to the new boundaries and be fine.
Two things:
1. you ignore the regional model will balance kids out between the 4 schools in the region.
2. you expect utopia or perfection. that won't happen and can't happen due to logistical challenges and increased expense.
1. Do they plan to use the regional model to balance utilization by luring relatively rich and well resourced kids from Wheaton to WJ? That is terrible idea. It is also not something they have been transparent about.
2. I don't expect utopia. Notice I am not expecting them to bus Farmland kids to Kennedy. I think it is extremely ridiculous that was in an option in the first place. Expecting them to use their existing facilities efficiently so as not to need to spend more money constructing more seats they don't need is not only not asking for perfection, it is simply asking for basic common sense.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Seems a proposal to shift back to the original option B may go further. That option was prepared and presented in detail and got positive feedback from the community.
Going back to option B means sending WW back to overcrowded Wheaton, right? And reversing a bunch of un-related changes in Silver Spring? That doesn't make any sense. Why would they propose that rather than just switching the boundaries between WJ and Woodward?
Easiest is to simply swap ES area in WJ and Woodward.
Farmland into Wheaton or Kennedy would have a greater balancing effect on FARMs. And they can show just how genuine their sentiments are.
Say it louder for the people in the back! Let’s bus the wealthy white families to Wheaton to satisfy their complaints.
Yes! Bus the whites to Kennedy and Wheaton...oh wait, isn't that what the regional program is? Put the IB and Math/Science/Engineering program in the ghetto....aka bus the high performing whites (and asian americans) to MS13 territory
Wheaton will continue to have their STEM magnet which is certainly not in the ghetto as you describe. It’s a popular program and part of why Wheaton is currently so overcrowded.
Wheaton gets the Edison seats/capacity too!
Enter: Dude who says the seats are phantom at Edison and not real for Wheaton. ::insert his/her typical rant::
You found me. Can you explain in clear terms how those 500 seats materialized? I've asked MCPS and here on DCUM and nobody can answer how they will continue to offer parttime Edison programs to students countywide and add 500 full time seats for resident Wheaton students to Edison which does not currently confer high school diplomas.
Sounds like you support the Superintendent's recommendation? Is that the sentiment in the broader Wheaton cluster?
No, I am not in the Wheaton or proposed WJ/Woodward clusters. I think it would be better to balance FARMS between Woodward and WJ because that is what would be best for the kids. But I don't expect Taylor or the BOE to do this, and I kind of get it, it's certainly not a magic bullet. I am frustrated that I don't see any urgency on their part in terms of improving outcomes for low income kids and this feels like low hanging fruit.
Wrt Wheaton capacity I am concerned as a taxpayer that they are promising capacity that doesn't exist and requires more spending to create. Spending that there is no money for. There is plenty of capacity in the existing buildings, and the entire purpose of the boundary study is to use that capacity, so they should do it. Even the Superintendent's recommendation leaves Wheaton somewhat over capacity. At the proposed utilization level I can kind of buy that some of that will be relieved by students attending Edison part time, but it's still insane to me they aren't doing more to relieve Wheaton. People will be angry in the short term and then they will get used to the new boundaries and be fine.
Two things:
1. you ignore the regional model will balance kids out between the 4 schools in the region.
2. you expect utopia or perfection. that won't happen and can't happen due to logistical challenges and increased expense.
1. Do they plan to use the regional model to balance utilization by luring relatively rich and well resourced kids from Wheaton to WJ? That is terrible idea. It is also not something they have been transparent about.
2. I don't expect utopia. Notice I am not expecting them to bus Farmland kids to Kennedy. I think it is extremely ridiculous that was in an option in the first place. Expecting them to use their existing facilities efficiently so as not to need to spend more money constructing more seats they don't need is not only not asking for perfection, it is simply asking for basic common sense.
Anonymous wrote:Wait, the Woodward people are now trying to make the rest of us pay millions for renovations to Edison for extra classrooms for Wheaton, because they think there's something so terrible about a 30% FARMS rate that they should take valuable money out of the budget for other schools to make sure they don't have to deal with it?
Anonymous wrote:Wait, the Woodward people are now trying to make the rest of us pay millions for renovations to Edison for extra classrooms for Wheaton, because they think there's something so terrible about a 30% FARMS rate that they should take valuable money out of the budget for other schools to make sure they don't have to deal with it?
Anonymous wrote:Wait, the Woodward people are now trying to make the rest of us pay millions for renovations to Edison for extra classrooms for Wheaton, because they think there's something so terrible about a 30% FARMS rate that they should take valuable money out of the budget for other schools to make sure they don't have to deal with it?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:At least everyone is starting to realize BOE will end up voting in favor of the Superintendent's proposal. No use tweaking at this point. Move this along.
Yea, it's worth it to see the Deborah realtor and Diana PTA person heads spin around exorcist style over the decision
Have any of you spoken out your concerns publicly, with your name attached to it?
Why would I? I approve of the Superintendent's recommendation. Let them grasp and straws and ruin their reputation on their own. Besides, you can tell them the public sentiment from this board.
I am just looking to understand if anyone has shared a real refutation of their statements. There IS no public sentiment that I can find.
Other than this thread, no - no one is publicly disagreeing with them. And this thread seems to be at least one VM family and then at least one troll who is trying to start trouble. (I really don’t think that person is actually from a WJ family.)
Strategy is to hold cards close if you are in the advantaged position. No need to battle it out publicly. Need to see what happens at the mtg. Rubber stamp is my guess.
That’s fine but then certainly no one should be on this thread trashing them, if that were true.
Isn't that the point of DCUM? it's fun.
I certainly don’t expect any better! But I do think it is gross to come on a forum and anonymously trash people by name. It is cowardly.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Seems a proposal to shift back to the original option B may go further. That option was prepared and presented in detail and got positive feedback from the community.
Going back to option B means sending WW back to overcrowded Wheaton, right? And reversing a bunch of un-related changes in Silver Spring? That doesn't make any sense. Why would they propose that rather than just switching the boundaries between WJ and Woodward?
Easiest is to simply swap ES area in WJ and Woodward.
Farmland into Wheaton or Kennedy would have a greater balancing effect on FARMs. And they can show just how genuine their sentiments are.
Say it louder for the people in the back! Let’s bus the wealthy white families to Wheaton to satisfy their complaints.
Yes! Bus the whites to Kennedy and Wheaton...oh wait, isn't that what the regional program is? Put the IB and Math/Science/Engineering program in the ghetto....aka bus the high performing whites (and asian americans) to MS13 territory
Wheaton will continue to have their STEM magnet which is certainly not in the ghetto as you describe. It’s a popular program and part of why Wheaton is currently so overcrowded.
Wheaton gets the Edison seats/capacity too!
Enter: Dude who says the seats are phantom at Edison and not real for Wheaton. ::insert his/her typical rant::
You found me. Can you explain in clear terms how those 500 seats materialized? I've asked MCPS and here on DCUM and nobody can answer how they will continue to offer parttime Edison programs to students countywide and add 500 full time seats for resident Wheaton students to Edison which does not currently confer high school diplomas.
Sounds like you support the Superintendent's recommendation? Is that the sentiment in the broader Wheaton cluster?
No, I am not in the Wheaton or proposed WJ/Woodward clusters. I think it would be better to balance FARMS between Woodward and WJ because that is what would be best for the kids. But I don't expect Taylor or the BOE to do this, and I kind of get it, it's certainly not a magic bullet. I am frustrated that I don't see any urgency on their part in terms of improving outcomes for low income kids and this feels like low hanging fruit.
Wrt Wheaton capacity I am concerned as a taxpayer that they are promising capacity that doesn't exist and requires more spending to create. Spending that there is no money for. There is plenty of capacity in the existing buildings, and the entire purpose of the boundary study is to use that capacity, so they should do it. Even the Superintendent's recommendation leaves Wheaton somewhat over capacity. At the proposed utilization level I can kind of buy that some of that will be relieved by students attending Edison part time, but it's still insane to me they aren't doing more to relieve Wheaton. People will be angry in the short term and then they will get used to the new boundaries and be fine.
Two things:
1. you ignore the regional model will balance kids out between the 4 schools in the region.
2. you expect utopia or perfection. that won't happen and can't happen due to logistical challenges and increased expense.