Anonymous wrote:Why exactly is finding out that an injury occurred in a classroom with arguably too many kids relegated to "gossip"?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It seems like an awkward arrangement to us but our child seems fine with it.
Not sure what classroom noise or this alleged concussion has to do with it though - 2 teachers ought to be better able to control a classroom than one.
What are the details on this concussion incident - your post is the first I've heard of it.
The concussion happened within the past few days.
And do you have details on what happened and whether it had anything to do with the 3rd grade classroom model? I can easily see how my child might get a concussion on the playground or maybe in PE but a concussion typically requires a serious blow to the head and I'm having a hard time figuring how that may have happened in a classroom.
Also we are pretty socially dialed in so I find it hard to believe we haven't heard about this already so I hope you are not making things up to stir the pot?
you mean you gossip! Happy to hear that the school is ding what it can to keep some things confidential. My kid has a physical altercation with another last year and I would have been incensed if it had been passed around among the "socially dialed in".
Oh get over yourself - I have a child in the same grade at the same school as where this alleged incident took place and since things can escalate between kids on the playground I certainly would have hoped to learn about this incident from a fellow parent, the school or my child as I think most parents would have - this has nothing to do with gossip.
Interestingly I heard about it from none of the three groups and no other parent has chimed in to corroborate this story on this thread - since this incident, according to the OP, involved two classes of 32 students there is a 50/50 chance it would have involved one of dear child's classes and with the number of impacted parents it is odd this is apparently a secret several days after it allegedly happened.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It seems like an awkward arrangement to us but our child seems fine with it.
Not sure what classroom noise or this alleged concussion has to do with it though - 2 teachers ought to be better able to control a classroom than one.
What are the details on this concussion incident - your post is the first I've heard of it.
The concussion happened within the past few days.
And do you have details on what happened and whether it had anything to do with the 3rd grade classroom model? I can easily see how my child might get a concussion on the playground or maybe in PE but a concussion typically requires a serious blow to the head and I'm having a hard time figuring how that may have happened in a classroom.
Also we are pretty socially dialed in so I find it hard to believe we haven't heard about this already so I hope you are not making things up to stir the pot?
you mean you gossip! Happy to hear that the school is ding what it can to keep some things confidential. My kid has a physical altercation with another last year and I would have been incensed if it had been passed around among the "socially dialed in".
Oh get over yourself - I have a child in the same grade at the same school as where this alleged incident took place and since things can escalate between kids on the playground I certainly would have hoped to learn about this incident from a fellow parent, the school or my child as I think most parents would have - this has nothing to do with gossip.
Interestingly I heard about it from none of the three groups and no other parent has chimed in to corroborate this story on this thread - since this incident, according to the OP, involved two classes of 32 students there is a 50/50 chance it would have involved one of dear child's classes and with the number of impacted parents it is odd this is apparently a secret several days after it allegedly happened.
Anonymous wrote:The Principal could have not allocated the additional classroom to PreK last year - but chose to do so.
So given the current population, 3rd, 4th and 5th grade classes for the foreseeable future will have 30+ children to a grade.
I would recommend that they look hard at families that were IB and moved OOB who are not enrolled because of Principal discretion.
Does any Janney family know a classmate who does not really live IBs? Willing to step up and report it to the school?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It seems like an awkward arrangement to us but our child seems fine with it.
Not sure what classroom noise or this alleged concussion has to do with it though - 2 teachers ought to be better able to control a classroom than one.
What are the details on this concussion incident - your post is the first I've heard of it.
The concussion happened within the past few days.
And do you have details on what happened and whether it had anything to do with the 3rd grade classroom model? I can easily see how my child might get a concussion on the playground or maybe in PE but a concussion typically requires a serious blow to the head and I'm having a hard time figuring how that may have happened in a classroom.
Also we are pretty socially dialed in so I find it hard to believe we haven't heard about this already so I hope you are not making things up to stir the pot?
you mean you gossip! Happy to hear that the school is ding what it can to keep some things confidential. My kid has a physical altercation with another last year and I would have been incensed if it had been passed around among the "socially dialed in".
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are all the third grade classes set up this way? Will it be like that for the 4th and fifth grades too then for this cohort?
all the 3rd grade classes are 31/32.
the old principal (who left in May) wouldn't answer this last year when asked about 4th/5th grade sizes. it would seem to be the plan because the school is out of rooms and
some neighborhood covenant prevents them from adding trailers to the yard.
It's concerning because some of the younger grades are even bigger.
It's pretty clear that Janney will have to redo it's boundaries or get rid of PreK
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It seems like an awkward arrangement to us but our child seems fine with it.
Not sure what classroom noise or this alleged concussion has to do with it though - 2 teachers ought to be better able to control a classroom than one.
What are the details on this concussion incident - your post is the first I've heard of it.
The concussion happened within the past few days.
And do you have details on what happened and whether it had anything to do with the 3rd grade classroom model? I can easily see how my child might get a concussion on the playground or maybe in PE but a concussion typically requires a serious blow to the head and I'm having a hard time figuring how that may have happened in a classroom.
Also we are pretty socially dialed in so I find it hard to believe we haven't heard about this already so I hope you are not making things up to stir the pot?
Anonymous wrote:All the third grade classes are that big (31 to 33).
The kid who was injured was taken to the hospital and is doing fine.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can't if they still rezone to Murch and ask them to stop taking OOB?
Murch is designed for 400 students, has over 620, is very very full, with entire grades in trailers, and a building from 100 years ago. In addition to that, Murch will be renovated in the next two year and the over 600 Murch kids will have to go somewhere we do not yet know where. in short, Murch is not the solution for Janney's overcrowding.
And it is very, very hard for DCPS to throttle OOB back. Parents EOTP have very settled expectations that a number of slots will be available in WOTP schools. Maybe not Janney and Mann, but certainly Hearst, Eaton, Murch. Reducing OOB slots significantly is the political third rail of DC politics, and chancellors and mayors Know it.
Eh, don't be too sure. Murch has -- wait for it -- dialed back the number of OOB spots every single year since I started watching 7 years ago.
If it's implemented a teeny bit at a time, the dialing back process doesn't rouse the lion across the park that is the (for the moment) politically connected Gold Coast class.
Agreed. This is actually happening at many WOTP schools. Even schools like Hearst that are largely OOB are shifting quickly (for better or worse). And this isn't new either. Janney had more OOB slots not that long ago.
Anonymous wrote:Janney did something similar a few years ago. They put over forty third graders into one classroom. It did not seem to work out well. I am surprised that they are trying something similar. Did parents know about this in advance? Two teachers or not, that is a huge class.
Anonymous wrote:All the dialing!