Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:From the open house, I understood that they routinely hold kids back. If a child does not want to repeat the grade, they have to leave, so technically you cannot fault the school or call the practice illegal, as the parent is choosing to withdraw.
Most public schools do not hold kids back even if they are way behind. Both are problematic in their own different ways.
Yeah, I also heard this at the open house (maybe we were at the same one)... She said that around 20 percent of the kids don't pass their comps, and while they have a chance to retake it (or repeat), the student often leaves.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have a kid who is not sporty and all the good things I hear about EH have to do with the sports and extracurriculars. He already has his own outside extras. What EH parents won't say, and perhaps they don't know, is how watered down is the curriculum to accommodate 80% of the kids not on grade level? That is what I care about, not the "free" bus that takes them to swim meets and to golf or whatever other sport.
There are a ton of other clubs the kids have a lot of fun with not just sports. If you need your kid to be in a gifted program it’s probably not for you. My smart kid is very engaged by many of his classes. Someone else mentioned ELA which I am also pleasantly surprised by. Frankly I’m not sure the academic experience is that different from the other DCPS MS. And the teachers are incredibly accessible and supportive.
Anonymous wrote:I have a kid who is not sporty and all the good things I hear about EH have to do with the sports and extracurriculars. He already has his own outside extras. What EH parents won't say, and perhaps they don't know, is how watered down is the curriculum to accommodate 80% of the kids not on grade level? That is what I care about, not the "free" bus that takes them to swim meets and to golf or whatever other sport.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The test scores at EH are high for white students who aren't ell and don't have disabilities. But they are high for that population at any dcps that has enough of such kids to report. But getting a 4 or 5 on parcc isn't the same as having good language and arts classes, sports and other extracurriculars, and a group of classmates from stable and highly educated families. Some people are happy or ok without those things. Some see the economic diversity at a school like EH as a positive that outweighs any negatives, or at least something tolerable because it allows them to stay in their home on the Hill. Some kids will thrive and others will wish their parents moved to MoCo. There isn't one right answer.
I’m an EH parent and I can tell you my kid is having a great time, teachers have been very responsive, and some of the admins are flat-out wonderful. It’s not a fancy private school where you can pay to filter out real life. Given the US will be majority-minority for our kids I actually think this is crucial for white boys. It is FAR from perfect but calling it “terrible” is ridiculous. PS the kids love the extra curriculars.
(also LOL at the idea that the school has no “stable and highly educated families.” I’d list the credentials we all have but that would be obnoxious. It’s just not dominated by “us” which makes people uncomfortable in theory I get it. But in practice it’s absolutely the least of my concerns.)
No one said the school was completely lacking in stable and highly educated families. But if you compare it to some suburban school districts, including ones that have a lot of diversity and transit and cheaper housing, the difference is marked. Same with the arts instruction. What a school can do with a bunch of kids who started lessons in early elementary (and often private lessons before that) is different than what can be done at EH.
If you’re in that rat race you should just be all-in and go move to Potomac or whatever. Not sure why you are here.
The choice isn't just Hill East v. Potomac. There are plenty of places with metro access, more diversity, better achievement across various demographics, lower housing costs, and lower crime than the EH zone. Some people would rather stay on the Hill. That's fine. Different schools and living situations work for different kids. But don't pretend that the only two options are a school where 2/3 of the kids aren't proficient in reading and 4/5 in math (there are more non- proficient kids than economically disadvantaged so it's not "just" poverty that's an issue) or Potomac.
Anonymous wrote:I have a kid who is not sporty and all the good things I hear about EH have to do with the sports and extracurriculars. He already has his own outside extras. What EH parents won't say, and perhaps they don't know, is how watered down is the curriculum to accommodate 80% of the kids not on grade level? That is what I care about, not the "free" bus that takes them to swim meets and to golf or whatever other sport.
Anonymous wrote:From the open house, I understood that they routinely hold kids back. If a child does not want to repeat the grade, they have to leave, so technically you cannot fault the school or call the practice illegal, as the parent is choosing to withdraw.
Most public schools do not hold kids back even if they are way behind. Both are problematic in their own different ways.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How can you be ok with Inspired Teaching and SWWFS and not BASIS?
May as well keep them at EH then.
BASIS has such high attrition rates that you can be ok with BASIS for 5th grade, but there's a good chance it's not going to turn out to be the full middle school plan. It's on my list, but that concerns me -- that a lot of families that go to BASIS initially wind up having to figure out alternatives in a couple of years later anyway.
I have a theory about this. The attrition comes from the kids who did not want to go to BASIS in the first place, but didn't get into Latin, and parents felt they should give BASIS a shot when offered a spot. BASIS is not for everyone. I know lots of families who did not put it on their list.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How can you be ok with Inspired Teaching and SWWFS and not BASIS?
May as well keep them at EH then.
BASIS has such high attrition rates that you can be ok with BASIS for 5th grade, but there's a good chance it's not going to turn out to be the full middle school plan. It's on my list, but that concerns me -- that a lot of families that go to BASIS initially wind up having to figure out alternatives in a couple of years later anyway.
Anonymous wrote:How can you be ok with Inspired Teaching and SWWFS and not BASIS?
May as well keep them at EH then.