Anonymous wrote:Poor little coddled SWS'ers. Send 'em to SH or EH with the metal detectors to get a dose of how the 99% live.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:To confirm, the ONLY two city wide elementary schools in the city are in ward 6 and are less than a mile away from each other?
So far! It was explained on one of these threads that there are many extra school buildings on the Hill that date back to the segregated schools. I'd much rather they repurpose them for citywide options (especially since the Hill is by definition a central location) than sell them for condos.
"many"? that's a stretch. a number have been sold and converted to condos. Aside from Van Ness which will reopen in 2015-16, what other unoccupied school buildings are located in Ward 6 (Hine aside since it's getting demolished). Two Rivers will occupy the the Charles E. Young buidling (and sell their NoMa buildings, not likely to DCPS)
Well, there are too many neighborhood schools still open. Most of the Hill schools have large OOB populations.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:To confirm, the ONLY two city wide elementary schools in the city are in ward 6 and are less than a mile away from each other?
So far! It was explained on one of these threads that there are many extra school buildings on the Hill that date back to the segregated schools. I'd much rather they repurpose them for citywide options (especially since the Hill is by definition a central location) than sell them for condos.
"many"? that's a stretch. a number have been sold and converted to condos. Aside from Van Ness which will reopen in 2015-16, what other unoccupied school buildings are located in Ward 6 (Hine aside since it's getting demolished). Two Rivers will occupy the the Charles E. Young buidling (and sell their NoMa buildings, not likely to DCPS)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:To confirm, the ONLY two city wide elementary schools in the city are in ward 6 and are less than a mile away from each other?
So far! It was explained on one of these threads that there are many extra school buildings on the Hill that date back to the segregated schools. I'd much rather they repurpose them for citywide options (especially since the Hill is by definition a central location) than sell them for condos.
Anonymous wrote:To confirm, the ONLY two city wide elementary schools in the city are in ward 6 and are less than a mile away from each other?
Anonymous wrote:12:41 ??? Then why does Oyster have a feed? Logan dodged this by adding MS to itself, which SWS just does not have the room to do in the Goding building.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't understand why SWS needs a middle school feed. Everyone who goes there has an IB school based on their home address. If the school is city-wide on the way in, it should be city-wide on the way out. That is how charters work that are not part of a specific system such as language immersion. If there was a Reggio middle school that was fed by all the city-wide Reggio elementary schools then it would make sense that SWS would get a feed to that. But, since such a middle school doesn't exist and there are no other city-wide Reggio schools to fill up such a middle school, everyone should just return to their IB middle school.
Neighborhood schools are for neighborhood kids. Kids at city-wide schools can fill open spaces at those neighborhood schools through the city-wide OOB lottery.
So is the penalty for attending a city-wide school not being able to stay with your cohort and friends from K-5? You sign on for city wide, you sign on to sending your kid to a new group of students and new environment in MS? I'm not saying I disagree withy his, just wondering what the sentiment is surrounding citywide schools. If DCPS were to add more citywide, specialized schools, is this the general consensus about what should happens to them in MS? Does this mean citywide schools ultimately hurt or help the MS feed... Is this an argument against them?
I wouldn't use the word penalty, since going to a city-wide school isn't a requirement for anyone and staying with your cohort from K-5 is not the most important consideration when considering MS (and, if it was to your family, you could always choose to go to your IB school.) There are lots of kids at K-5 charters whose parents are making the same city-wide choice and will have to make a new choice at MS. I'm not sure it is an argument against city-wide schools. We all make trade offs when choosing schools (or at least choosing to try to get lucky in the lottery) and not having a MS feed seems like a reasonable downside for the upside of getting into a specialized program for ES.