Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Didn't moving Eaton to Hardy and then Hardy to MacArthur address overcrowding in at Jackson Reed? Is it projected to be over-enrolled after Hardy students lose their feeder rights to J-R? I thought that the whole reason for opening MacArthur in the first place.
This is correct. It's a non issue, but muscle memory continues to have people fighting for scraps. Even Deal is under enrollment from pre covid highs. JR will be under 1700 next year and will continue to drop
JR is at 2200 students this year. Hardy sent like 100-150 students to JR each year. Explain the math.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Didn't moving Eaton to Hardy and then Hardy to MacArthur address overcrowding in at Jackson Reed? Is it projected to be over-enrolled after Hardy students lose their feeder rights to J-R? I thought that the whole reason for opening MacArthur in the first place.
This is correct. It's a non issue, but muscle memory continues to have people fighting for scraps. Even Deal is under enrollment from pre covid highs. JR will be under 1700 next year and will continue to drop
JR is at 2200 students this year. Hardy sent like 100-150 students to JR each year. Explain the math.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:All this Ward talk. I didn’t know DCPS was supposed to align its feeder patterns by wards. Seems like it should be by proximity, and that may or may not fall along arbitrary ward lines. But if staying in ward is the desired policy, shouldn’t Bancroft then be compelled to stay in their ward. They are ward 1, right? Also by proximity it would make sense not to cross the park to get to school.
It sucks for political representation. You think the Ward 1 council member gives a crap about assisting with an issue at the schools in Tenleytown?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:All this Ward talk. I didn’t know DCPS was supposed to align its feeder patterns by wards. Seems like it should be by proximity, and that may or may not fall along arbitrary ward lines. But if staying in ward is the desired policy, shouldn’t Bancroft then be compelled to stay in their ward. They are ward 1, right? Also by proximity it would make sense not to cross the park to get to school.
And you know Ward 3 starts literally across the street from Lafayette, right?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Didn't moving Eaton to Hardy and then Hardy to MacArthur address overcrowding in at Jackson Reed? Is it projected to be over-enrolled after Hardy students lose their feeder rights to J-R? I thought that the whole reason for opening MacArthur in the first place.
This is correct. It's a non issue, but muscle memory continues to have people fighting for scraps. Even Deal is under enrollment from pre covid highs. JR will be under 1700 next year and will continue to drop
JR is at 2200 students this year. Hardy sent like 100-150 students to JR each year. Explain the math.
Well, if Hardy typically sends 125 kids per year to JR, they feed about 500 of the 2200 total students there across all grades. In 4 years -- all else being equal -- there will be 1700 students at JR. And that doesn't account for the drop off of JR kids who went to Eaton and Deal.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think DC's mayor and her staff believe that she ignores the views of privilege hoarders to her peril. I think they are embarrassed to give in to segregationist views, but do so because they know how what these people really want.
The left-of-limousine liberals in DC say a lot, get listened to little, and I think DC government realizes they aren't here in big numbers, though they can vote in CMs like Lewis George.
What happens is that educated middle income parents who really need good public schools and can't afford private get shafted. Our needs don't ever rate because we're not important enough that we need to be satisfied and no politician gets virtue points for ensuring our children are stimulated and safe in school. We're the ones who get sent away with "your kids will be fine..."
Uh, doesn't nearly every parent in DC really need good public schools......whether or not they are educated and middle income or not? Do those parents (aka the typical DCUM poster) somehow need really good public schools more than all the lower income students? Don't all of these students deserve equal access to good public schools?
Yes but for some the definition of "good school" is not based on the characteristics of the school. It's based on the characteristics of the students. A "good school" is equivalent to having a "good cohort of kids" with with kids on or above grade level, already proficient.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Didn't moving Eaton to Hardy and then Hardy to MacArthur address overcrowding in at Jackson Reed? Is it projected to be over-enrolled after Hardy students lose their feeder rights to J-R? I thought that the whole reason for opening MacArthur in the first place.
This is correct. It's a non issue, but muscle memory continues to have people fighting for scraps. Even Deal is under enrollment from pre covid highs. JR will be under 1700 next year and will continue to drop
JR is at 2200 students this year. Hardy sent like 100-150 students to JR each year. Explain the math.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think DC's mayor and her staff believe that she ignores the views of privilege hoarders to her peril. I think they are embarrassed to give in to segregationist views, but do so because they know how what these people really want.
The left-of-limousine liberals in DC say a lot, get listened to little, and I think DC government realizes they aren't here in big numbers, though they can vote in CMs like Lewis George.
What happens is that educated middle income parents who really need good public schools and can't afford private get shafted. Our needs don't ever rate because we're not important enough that we need to be satisfied and no politician gets virtue points for ensuring our children are stimulated and safe in school. We're the ones who get sent away with "your kids will be fine..."
Uh, doesn't nearly every parent in DC really need good public schools......whether or not they are educated and middle income or not? Do those parents (aka the typical DCUM poster) somehow need really good public schools more than all the lower income students? Don't all of these students deserve equal access to good public schools?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Didn't moving Eaton to Hardy and then Hardy to MacArthur address overcrowding in at Jackson Reed? Is it projected to be over-enrolled after Hardy students lose their feeder rights to J-R? I thought that the whole reason for opening MacArthur in the first place.
This is correct. It's a non issue, but muscle memory continues to have people fighting for scraps. Even Deal is under enrollment from pre covid highs. JR will be under 1700 next year and will continue to drop
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think DC's mayor and her staff believe that she ignores the views of privilege hoarders to her peril. I think they are embarrassed to give in to segregationist views, but do so because they know how what these people really want.
The left-of-limousine liberals in DC say a lot, get listened to little, and I think DC government realizes they aren't here in big numbers, though they can vote in CMs like Lewis George.
What happens is that educated middle income parents who really need good public schools and can't afford private get shafted. Our needs don't ever rate because we're not important enough that we need to be satisfied and no politician gets virtue points for ensuring our children are stimulated and safe in school. We're the ones who get sent away with "your kids will be fine..."
Anonymous wrote:Didn't moving Eaton to Hardy and then Hardy to MacArthur address overcrowding in at Jackson Reed? Is it projected to be over-enrolled after Hardy students lose their feeder rights to J-R? I thought that the whole reason for opening MacArthur in the first place.
Anonymous wrote:All this Ward talk. I didn’t know DCPS was supposed to align its feeder patterns by wards. Seems like it should be by proximity, and that may or may not fall along arbitrary ward lines. But if staying in ward is the desired policy, shouldn’t Bancroft then be compelled to stay in their ward. They are ward 1, right? Also by proximity it would make sense not to cross the park to get to school.
Anonymous wrote:All this Ward talk. I didn’t know DCPS was supposed to align its feeder patterns by wards. Seems like it should be by proximity, and that may or may not fall along arbitrary ward lines. But if staying in ward is the desired policy, shouldn’t Bancroft then be compelled to stay in their ward. They are ward 1, right? Also by proximity it would make sense not to cross the park to get to school.