Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They wouldn't "demand" anything. Their kids would have to TEST IN.
If you think that people on the Hill wouldn't figure out a way to retake tests, have special accommodations, have a different test given to their special snowflake, etc., I want what you're smoking.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can we all please agree to stop calling it the Cluster, now that SH has only a passing acquaintance with Watkins and Peabody? They've undone the principal situation and many other schools feed to SH. Stop pretending that the kids at Peabody are going to be in school only with their peers by middle school.
What are you smoking? Passing acquaintance? Peabody feeds to Watkins, which feeds to SH. The three share a PTA and fundraising, including the Capitol Hill Classic and Renovator's Tour, not to mention a website (http://www.capitolhillclusterschool.org/) that describes the Cluster as one school with three campuses. So, I'll stop referring to Peabody/Watkins/SH as the Cluster when Peabody/Watkins/SH stops referring to itself as the Cluster. I also find it confounding that PP seems to think there are scores of OOB seats open to kids from Brent and other non-feeders. WTF?
Anonymous wrote:They wouldn't "demand" anything. Their kids would have to TEST IN.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It isn't just on the Hill. Parents who choose to send their kids to DC public schools rather than private schools or rather than moving to suburbs are very protective and at times defensive of their decision and of the schools, and they also are hyper-sensitive about the public perception of those schools, because to a great extent the quality of a neighborhood public school is a function of whether or not neighborhood families keep choosing to send their kids there.
A lot of parents send their kids to DCPS elementary schools but are thinking they may leave the system for middle school. Then when a few parents pull their kids out into private schools in the 3rd or 4th grade and it starts a mini-panic among those still in the elementary. People want to be assured that they are doing the right thing for their kids.
Haven't really seen kids leaving in 3rd or 4th in Hill schools and hear much the same from parents at other Hill ES. You DO however see an exodus in 5th grade for charters.
Unfortunately, I'm still seeing it. E.g. We had a bunch of kids over for a 3rd grade sleepover the other night, all from the same DCPS school. When I did a head count, I realized that most of them won't be returning for 4th grade. Parents are already moving to the burbs, and elsewhere in the country and the world, or privates because they know our assigned middle school won't work for them, not by a long shot, and wouldn't be satisfied with BASIS or Latin (particularly for HS), even if they could get in.
Our politicians have really let us down and Bowser and Henderson and co. could absolutely care less if they lose these families, all of whom started DCPS in PreK3 or PreK4. Most of these kids' parents have been very involved in the PTA from the get go. When I passed Charles Allen on a sidewalk the other night, it was all I could do to keep from yelling "WHERE IS OUT TEST-IN PROGRAM! WHY DOES WARD 7 GET ONE BUT NOT WARD 6?!" at him.
How would this work exactly? The number of seats this test-in program school would need to have would be enormous, as every white family on Capitol Hill would demand that their kids get in.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It isn't just on the Hill. Parents who choose to send their kids to DC public schools rather than private schools or rather than moving to suburbs are very protective and at times defensive of their decision and of the schools, and they also are hyper-sensitive about the public perception of those schools, because to a great extent the quality of a neighborhood public school is a function of whether or not neighborhood families keep choosing to send their kids there.
A lot of parents send their kids to DCPS elementary schools but are thinking they may leave the system for middle school. Then when a few parents pull their kids out into private schools in the 3rd or 4th grade and it starts a mini-panic among those still in the elementary. People want to be assured that they are doing the right thing for their kids.
Haven't really seen kids leaving in 3rd or 4th in Hill schools and hear much the same from parents at other Hill ES. You DO however see an exodus in 5th grade for charters.
Unfortunately, I'm still seeing it. E.g. We had a bunch of kids over for a 3rd grade sleepover the other night, all from the same DCPS school. When I did a head count, I realized that most of them won't be returning for 4th grade. Parents are already moving to the burbs, and elsewhere in the country and the world, or privates because they know our assigned middle school won't work for them, not by a long shot, and wouldn't be satisfied with BASIS or Latin (particularly for HS), even if they could get in.
Our politicians have really let us down and Bowser and Henderson and co. could absolutely care less if they lose these families, all of whom started DCPS in PreK3 or PreK4. Most of these kids' parents have been very involved in the PTA from the get go. When I passed Charles Allen on a sidewalk the other night, it was all I could do to keep from yelling "WHERE IS OUT TEST-IN PROGRAM! WHY DOES WARD 7 GET ONE BUT NOT WARD 6?!" at him.
Anonymous wrote:
Nationals Park. The planned soccer stadium at Buzzard Point (and the willingness to do a below-market trade of the Reeves Center to get land for it). The streetcar.
Not the council but DCHA spent a ton of money on the redevelopment of Capper/Carrollsburg into Capitol Quarter and surrounding buildings, and to a less-successful extent, redevelopment near Sursum Corda and Park Morton.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:nch of kids over for a 3rd grade sleepover the other night, all from the same DCPS school. When I did a head count, I realized that most of them won't be returning for 4th grade. Parents are already moving to the burbs, and elsewhere in the country and the world, or privates because they know our assigned middle school won't work for them, not by a long shot, and wouldn't be satisfied with BASIS or Latin (particularly for HS), even if they could get in.
Our politicians have really let us down and Bowser and Henderson and co. could absolutely care less if they lose these families, all of whom started DCPS in PreK3 or PreK4. Most of these kids' parents have been very involved in the PTA from the get go. When I passed Charles Allen on a sidewalk the other night, it was all I could do to keep from yelling "WHERE IS OUT TEST-IN PROGRAM! WHY DOES WARD 7 GET ONE BUT NOT WARD 6?!" at him.
You'll be lucky to get a language immersion offer as a subtle test-in in masquerade/gimmick. But yes, why not just a simple, serious school as you suggest where kids can learn without major disruptions? The Council throws a lot of money at developers to make projects happen; all they have to do is make quality DCPS schools and the market will handle the rest. But that's too simple.
Anonymous wrote:Can we all please agree to stop calling it the Cluster, now that SH has only a passing acquaintance with Watkins and Peabody? They've undone the principal situation and many other schools feed to SH. Stop pretending that the kids at Peabody are going to be in school only with their peers by middle school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It isn't just on the Hill. Parents who choose to send their kids to DC public schools rather than private schools or rather than moving to suburbs are very protective and at times defensive of their decision and of the schools, and they also are hyper-sensitive about the public perception of those schools, because to a great extent the quality of a neighborhood public school is a function of whether or not neighborhood families keep choosing to send their kids there.
A lot of parents send their kids to DCPS elementary schools but are thinking they may leave the system for middle school. Then when a few parents pull their kids out into private schools in the 3rd or 4th grade and it starts a mini-panic among those still in the elementary. People want to be assured that they are doing the right thing for their kids.
Haven't really seen kids leaving in 3rd or 4th in Hill schools and hear much the same from parents at other Hill ES. You DO however see an exodus in 5th grade for charters.
Unfortunately, I'm still seeing it. E.g. We had a bunch of kids over for a 3rd grade sleepover the other night, all from the same DCPS school. When I did a head count, I realized that most of them won't be returning for 4th grade. Parents are already moving to the burbs, and elsewhere in the country and the world, or privates because they know our assigned middle school won't work for them, not by a long shot, and wouldn't be satisfied with BASIS or Latin (particularly for HS), even if they could get in.
Our politicians have really let us down and Bowser and Henderson and co. could absolutely care less if they lose these families, all of whom started DCPS in PreK3 or PreK4. Most of these kids' parents have been very involved in the PTA from the get go. When I passed Charles Allen on a sidewalk the other night, it was all I could do to keep from yelling "WHERE IS OUT TEST-IN PROGRAM! WHY DOES WARD 7 GET ONE BUT NOT WARD 6?!" at him.
Hahaha- I thought I was the only one who felt like screaming at Charles Allen when I run into him.
I keep waiting for Alice Deal for All.... But wait that's been proven to be a lie right? thanks bowser.
Fwiw- we live inside the historic district and my husband works in policy. I am a sahm. Lots of my neighbors do work in policy jobs or lobbying. But there are a few World Bank, IMF, and military families too.
Anonymous wrote:nch of kids over for a 3rd grade sleepover the other night, all from the same DCPS school. When I did a head count, I realized that most of them won't be returning for 4th grade. Parents are already moving to the burbs, and elsewhere in the country and the world, or privates because they know our assigned middle school won't work for them, not by a long shot, and wouldn't be satisfied with BASIS or Latin (particularly for HS), even if they could get in.
Our politicians have really let us down and Bowser and Henderson and co. could absolutely care less if they lose these families, all of whom started DCPS in PreK3 or PreK4. Most of these kids' parents have been very involved in the PTA from the get go. When I passed Charles Allen on a sidewalk the other night, it was all I could do to keep from yelling "WHERE IS OUT TEST-IN PROGRAM! WHY DOES WARD 7 GET ONE BUT NOT WARD 6?!" at him.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It isn't just on the Hill. Parents who choose to send their kids to DC public schools rather than private schools or rather than moving to suburbs are very protective and at times defensive of their decision and of the schools, and they also are hyper-sensitive about the public perception of those schools, because to a great extent the quality of a neighborhood public school is a function of whether or not neighborhood families keep choosing to send their kids there.
A lot of parents send their kids to DCPS elementary schools but are thinking they may leave the system for middle school. Then when a few parents pull their kids out into private schools in the 3rd or 4th grade and it starts a mini-panic among those still in the elementary. People want to be assured that they are doing the right thing for their kids.
Haven't really seen kids leaving in 3rd or 4th in Hill schools and hear much the same from parents at other Hill ES. You DO however see an exodus in 5th grade for charters.
Unfortunately, I'm still seeing it. E.g. We had a bunch of kids over for a 3rd grade sleepover the other night, all from the same DCPS school. When I did a head count, I realized that most of them won't be returning for 4th grade. Parents are already moving to the burbs, and elsewhere in the country and the world, or privates because they know our assigned middle school won't work for them, not by a long shot, and wouldn't be satisfied with BASIS or Latin (particularly for HS), even if they could get in.
Our politicians have really let us down and Bowser and Henderson and co. could absolutely care less if they lose these families, all of whom started DCPS in PreK3 or PreK4. Most of these kids' parents have been very involved in the PTA from the get go. When I passed Charles Allen on a sidewalk the other night, it was all I could do to keep from yelling "WHERE IS OUT TEST-IN PROGRAM! WHY DOES WARD 7 GET ONE BUT NOT WARD 6?!" at him.
Hahaha- I thought I was the only one who felt like screaming at Charles Allen when I run into him.
I keep waiting for Alice Deal for All.... But wait that's been proven to be a lie right? thanks bowser.
Fwiw- we live inside the historic district and my husband works in policy. I am a sahm. Lots of my neighbors do work in policy jobs or lobbying. But there are a few World Bank, IMF, and military families too.
Anonymous wrote:Can we all please agree to stop calling it the Cluster, now that SH has only a passing acquaintance with Watkins and Peabody? They've undone the principal situation and many other schools feed to SH. Stop pretending that the kids at Peabody are going to be in school only with their peers by middle school.