Anonymous wrote:And where did all that Covid money go? DC schools are worse than ever.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:At what point will people admit no amount of money thrown at a school system will fix what is wrong with the city's population?
Never? Educators love the idea that they can be heroes and that play the roles of both teacher and social worker for the neediest kids, and politicians love the idea that desperately needed social work can be foisted on the schools, which is easier and cheaper than the level of family services really needed.
I hate the teacher as a hero thing. It is the worst part of being a teacher. I am no hero and this is just a job. My family will always come first before the job.
'Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:When looking at education statistics, DC is compared to entire states. If you compared it just to US cities, you'd likely get different results.
So they are the best of inner city public schools?
No DC does very poorly compared to other cities
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:At what point will people admit no amount of money thrown at a school system will fix what is wrong with the city's population?
Never? Educators love the idea that they can be heroes and that play the roles of both teacher and social worker for the neediest kids, and politicians love the idea that desperately needed social work can be foisted on the schools, which is easier and cheaper than the level of family services really needed.
i'm not sure how true this is. I loathe this part of my job and the expectation comes from the top. Many of us just want to teach, probably most of us, actually.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:At what point will people admit no amount of money thrown at a school system will fix what is wrong with the city's population?
Never? Educators love the idea that they can be heroes and that play the roles of both teacher and social worker for the neediest kids, and politicians love the idea that desperately needed social work can be foisted on the schools, which is easier and cheaper than the level of family services really needed.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As others have noted, it is the wrong comparison. Compare cities to cities not to states.
As others have noted, even when you compare cities to cities, DC still has poor results.
This thing about comparable data not being available is a flimsy excuse.
What is being compared? Or is there a link?
When I look at NAEP results for cities, DC is in the middle of the pack for math and a bit higher for reading.
https://www.nationsreportcard.gov/profiles/districtprofile?chort=1&sub=MAT&sj=XQ&sfj=NL&st=MN&year=2022R3
You are interpreting the data wrong. DC is 6-10 points WORST than your baseline large city performance. Look at the shades of colors and what they stand for and how far off points wise from that.
Forgot to add, looking at 8th grade which is better representation than 4th
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:At what point will people admit no amount of money thrown at a school system will fix what is wrong with the city's population?
Never? Educators love the idea that they can be heroes and that play the roles of both teacher and social worker for the neediest kids, and politicians love the idea that desperately needed social work can be foisted on the schools, which is easier and cheaper than the level of family services really needed.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As others have noted, it is the wrong comparison. Compare cities to cities not to states.
As others have noted, even when you compare cities to cities, DC still has poor results.
This thing about comparable data not being available is a flimsy excuse.
What is being compared? Or is there a link?
When I look at NAEP results for cities, DC is in the middle of the pack for math and a bit higher for reading.
https://www.nationsreportcard.gov/profiles/districtprofile?chort=1&sub=MAT&sj=XQ&sfj=NL&st=MN&year=2022R3
You are interpreting the data wrong. DC is 6-10 points WORST than your baseline large city performance. Look at the shades of colors and what they stand for and how far off points wise from that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As others have noted, it is the wrong comparison. Compare cities to cities not to states.
As others have noted, even when you compare cities to cities, DC still has poor results.
This thing about comparable data not being available is a flimsy excuse.
What is being compared? Or is there a link?
When I look at NAEP results for cities, DC is in the middle of the pack for math and a bit higher for reading.
https://www.nationsreportcard.gov/profiles/districtprofile?chort=1&sub=MAT&sj=XQ&sfj=NL&st=MN&year=2022R3
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:When looking at education statistics, DC is compared to entire states. If you compared it just to US cities, you'd likely get different results.
So they are the best of inner city public schools?
Anonymous wrote:When looking at education statistics, DC is compared to entire states. If you compared it just to US cities, you'd likely get different results.