Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I, for one, am a parent at one of the presumed feeder elementary schools and am excited about the possibility of getting involved and helping to build a new high school. And advocating for the investments in transportation that are clearly needed to make this work in a remotely equitable way. Lots of potential here for DC kids to have better experiences than if 2500 kids were all crammed into Wilson.
Good luck with that. DCPS Central hates parental involvement. I used to work there. Also, have you visited the site and looked at it carefully? It is a terrible fit for a HS.
Anonymous wrote:I, for one, am a parent at one of the presumed feeder elementary schools and am excited about the possibility of getting involved and helping to build a new high school. And advocating for the investments in transportation that are clearly needed to make this work in a remotely equitable way. Lots of potential here for DC kids to have better experiences than if 2500 kids were all crammed into Wilson.
Anonymous wrote:I, for one, am a parent at one of the presumed feeder elementary schools and am excited about the possibility of getting involved and helping to build a new high school. And advocating for the investments in transportation that are clearly needed to make this work in a remotely equitable way. Lots of potential here for DC kids to have better experiences than if 2500 kids were all crammed into Wilson.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So basically they are solving the 'by right' dc high school challenge by building a high ses school and having some opportunity for low ses to attend, and by default doing that at Wilson too. Its solving the wrong problems. And it's terrible to put a high school in such an inaccessible location. What happened to equity? This is akin to people sleeping out to get a spot at a charter school. You shouldn't be allowed to make something open for all and then build in barriers to make it not open for all.
Its accessible to MANY current DCPS students. The high school that currently serves these students is wildly overcrowded. It is equitable to meet their needs, too.
Anonymous wrote:So basically they are solving the 'by right' dc high school challenge by building a high ses school and having some opportunity for low ses to attend, and by default doing that at Wilson too. Its solving the wrong problems. And it's terrible to put a high school in such an inaccessible location. What happened to equity? This is akin to people sleeping out to get a spot at a charter school. You shouldn't be allowed to make something open for all and then build in barriers to make it not open for all.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Again reflecting DC's racial fears. The high schools are highly segregated, so the place for a new high school in DC is of course placed at the least accessible furthest corner of Georgetown.
Google Maps tells me if you get to the Anacostia Metro at 7:30 am, catch the Green Line then the D6, you can get to that location just before 9am.
So you wanna move some white people to Annacostia to hopefully full up all the open school seats? If the city wanted to get rid of high school boundaries they would have done it. Perhaps they did not cause they would have even more empty seats...
if the city wants to desegregate schools it would create a true magnet school centrally located. Dunbar is only at 50% capacity, turn that into a TJ or Boston Latin
How, exactly? Because isn't that what Banneker is already trying to do? DCPS already has eight selective high schools. A ninth isn't going to move the needle.
EIGHT?!?!?
Anonymous wrote:So basically they are solving the 'by right' dc high school challenge by building a high ses school and having some opportunity for low ses to attend, and by default doing that at Wilson too. Its solving the wrong problems. And it's terrible to put a high school in such an inaccessible location. What happened to equity? This is akin to people sleeping out to get a spot at a charter school. You shouldn't be allowed to make something open for all and then build in barriers to make it not open for all.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Again reflecting DC's racial fears. The high schools are highly segregated, so the place for a new high school in DC is of course placed at the least accessible furthest corner of Georgetown.
Google Maps tells me if you get to the Anacostia Metro at 7:30 am, catch the Green Line then the D6, you can get to that location just before 9am.
So you wanna move some white people to Annacostia to hopefully full up all the open school seats? If the city wanted to get rid of high school boundaries they would have done it. Perhaps they did not cause they would have even more empty seats...
if the city wants to desegregate schools it would create a true magnet school centrally located. Dunbar is only at 50% capacity, turn that into a TJ or Boston Latin
How, exactly? Because isn't that what Banneker is already trying to do? DCPS already has eight selective high schools. A ninth isn't going to move the needle.
Anonymous wrote:Hopefully they will expand the languages program at the high school - Hardy has an excellent Italian program. They could also be a hub for language immersion charters like Sela and Bethune which do not feed into DCI, maybe expand Hardy's language footprint and make the new high school a world languages program.