Anonymous wrote:12:26 here... I DO have an actual suggestion: The bottom line is that the schools need to improve, DCPS needs to recognize that many people perceive deep problems, that, as a result, people are avoiding many of the DCPS schools like the plague to instead move away (if they can), or send their kids to privates (if they can afford it), shlep their kids across town to charters, shlep their kids across town as OOB, et cetera. That is the stark reality that DCPS needs to deal with. City-wide lottery is just dealing with the symptoms, not the root cause.
NOBODY should be forced to have to go through all of that. NOBODY should be forced to move or shlep their kids across town to get access to a decent school.
This BS about just treating symptoms, denying there's a problem, paying it lip service, and deflecting of blame to everything else isn't going to solve anything.
Anonymous wrote:How about no lottery?
You live where you live and your kids can go to school in your neighborhood-end of story. Maybe some specialized schools to test into, especially for MS and high school.
Just like everywhere else in America.
I don't think that MCPS has any lottery. If you live in Rockville, you can go to the schools in Rockville, not lottery into Potomac. MCPS is one big system but they don't move regular ed. kids all over the place to fill seats.
For generations, people all over America have been buying houses in towns and neighborhoods where they like the schools-it has always been part real estate decisions for people with kids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What about building a new middle school? I remember that was brought up by Mary Cheh at some point a while back. Any mention of that in the focus groups, or other meetings? Or turning Duke Ellington back to Western. Seems like better option to overcrowding, Would have to pull kids from successful school and put them into failing ones in unsafe neighborhoods.
The problem is not lack of space system wide. There is plenty of extra capacity The problem is that there is a finite number of students who are academically proficient and advanced and these kids are, mostly, located at one DCPS location because they happen to live near the school. So naturally, every parent across the city wants their kid to be part of this peer group, despite the obvious space limitations and daily commute burden. DCPS needs to have some tough love with all the central city high SES parents and tell them they need to stay home and improve their neighborhood MS. There are enough new residents to tip these schools in the right direction. Time to Stand and Deliver.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How about no lottery?
You live where you live and your kids can go to school in your neighborhood-end of story. Maybe some specialized schools to test into, especially for MS and high school.
Just like everywhere else in America.
I don't think that MCPS has any lottery. If you live in Rockville, you can go to the schools in Rockville, not lottery into Potomac. MCPS is one big system but they don't move regular ed. kids all over the place to fill seats.
For generations, people all over America have been buying houses in towns and neighborhoods where they like the schools-it has always been part real estate decisions for people with kids.
Except, if the school where you live happens to suck, you have a problem. If you have extraordinary bandwidth, free time, energy, and knowledge (which most people don't) you can get involved in the neighborhood school and try to get it to change. And maybe, if you're lucky, the school might change - by the time your kids leave. Or, if you can afford it, you could move elsewhere, to a place that does have decent neighborhood schools. In which case, you might end up with a horrendous commute and far less time to spend with your kids as a parent. Et cetera. Sorry but for most of us who don't have a $500k HHI our options are far more limited.
Anonymous wrote:How about no lottery?
You live where you live and your kids can go to school in your neighborhood-end of story. Maybe some specialized schools to test into, especially for MS and high school.
Just like everywhere else in America.
I don't think that MCPS has any lottery. If you live in Rockville, you can go to the schools in Rockville, not lottery into Potomac. MCPS is one big system but they don't move regular ed. kids all over the place to fill seats.
For generations, people all over America have been buying houses in towns and neighborhoods where they like the schools-it has always been part real estate decisions for people with kids.
Anonymous wrote:How about no lottery?
You live where you live and your kids can go to school in your neighborhood-end of story. Maybe some specialized schools to test into, especially for MS and high school.
Just like everywhere else in America.
I don't think that MCPS has any lottery. If you live in Rockville, you can go to the schools in Rockville, not lottery into Potomac. MCPS is one big system but they don't move regular ed. kids all over the place to fill seats.
For generations, people all over America have been buying houses in towns and neighborhoods where they like the schools-it has always been part real estate decisions for people with kids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
According to Catania's website only 15% of the households in Ward 3 have school-age children. There are enough housing units in Ward 3 to house the entire DCPS population if every family wanted to and could afford to live there.
Only if every family wanted to live in a 1-bedroom apartment
Anonymous wrote:What about building a new middle school? I remember that was brought up by Mary Cheh at some point a while back. Any mention of that in the focus groups, or other meetings? Or turning Duke Ellington back to Western. Seems like better option to overcrowding, Would have to pull kids from successful school and put them into failing ones in unsafe neighborhoods.