Anonymous wrote:From what I've heard some AA folk think the Plan is to get all black kids in charters and white people in public school
Brilliant!Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Only in your dreams that demographics are changing... 51% of the city population and 95% of the school population doesn't have changing to your favorable demographic.
Come writers and critics
Who prophesize with your pen
And keep your eyes wide
The chance won't come again
And don't speak too soon
For the wheel's still in spin
And there's no tellin' who
That it's namin'
For the loser now
Will be later to win
For the demographics they are a-changin'.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Sorry, but you're absolutely wrong when you characterize DC charter schools as you did:
Question: What are the latest charter school demographics?
72% - Low income
8% - English Language Learners
11% - Special Education
83% - African American
12% - Hispanic/Latino
3% - Caucasian
1% - Asian/Pacific Islander
0% - Native American
1% - Other
Source: PCSB
So, yes you could describe YY as a "quirky, private school type program populated almost entirely by high-SES kids," (if 20 percent FARMS is what you mean), but that is far from the norm for DC charter schools.
I think that turning L-T into a charter is an interesting thought, but please do use real facts.
Where did you get this? Only 3% of chartersare Caucasian? No way that's correct.
I got it off the PCSB site, as I mentioned.
http://www.dcpcsb.org/Parents/DC-Charter-School-Factsheet.aspx
Data is from the 2012-13 school year. 3 percent of charter students are Caucasian. Why does this surprise you? Like the other poster you think that the only charter schools in this city are the 5 that get written about on DCUM?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Sorry, but you're absolutely wrong when you characterize DC charter schools as you did:
Question: What are the latest charter school demographics?
72% - Low income
8% - English Language Learners
11% - Special Education
83% - African American
12% - Hispanic/Latino
3% - Caucasian
1% - Asian/Pacific Islander
0% - Native American
1% - Other
Source: PCSB
So, yes you could describe YY as a "quirky, private school type program populated almost entirely by high-SES kids," (if 20 percent FARMS is what you mean), but that is far from the norm for DC charter schools.
I think that turning L-T into a charter is an interesting thought, but please do use real facts.
Where did you get this? Only 3% of chartersare Caucasian? No way that's correct.
Anonymous wrote:Only in your dreams that demographics are changing... 51% of the city population and 95% of the school population doesn't have changing to your favorable demographic.
Anonymous wrote:demographics are changing
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The student body of charters is self-selected, typically around a theme like language, arts, et cetera - similar to magnets. Boundaries make no sense. Whoever is proposing that really doesn't understand the whole concept and premise.
Oh please. The theme has been a quirky, private school type program populated almost entirely by high-SES kids in a zone where most schools serve OOB kids (who are, erm, poor). The concept and premise is well-heeled neighborhood parents with ahead-of-the-curve little kids finding what they want and need, and enough students from low-SES families to add real life flavor, keeping the "public" in public school. Whoever is criticizing this doesn't really understand the lure of the Hill for the best and brightest in town.
Shows how much you know. The majority of charter schools in DC serve low-income, AA families. Think KIPP, Achievement, Friendship, Eagle. Whether or not the Hill attracts the best and the brightest is up for debate.
Think Yu Ying, Basis, Latin - not so low-come any more