Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes, just like Wilson which attracts kids from all over. Great spot--on Red Line and on Wisconsin Ave. Bus line. If you have a better spot, why don't you propose it and build it? these things called charter actually take effort you know.
It has been SO difficult for charters to get good spaces. Despite a law that required DCPS to give charters first priority for empty space, DCPS stonewalled during the Fenty years and for part of the Gray administration. Part of it was institutional hostility to charters from the school bureaucracy and a lot of it was that favored developers called in chits with the mayors' offices to get choice DCPS properties put up for sale. On top of that, charters have no capital budget for purchases and renovations. So they have to raise the money themselves and finance the rest, which is tough. It took Latin a while to find its permanent home. Moreover, when Latin rented on 16th St, they were in two buildings that were some distance apart, so I don't think that Latin has any appetite for a second, split campus.
Other than the Franklin School, which prior DCPS schools went to the developers?
Anonymous wrote:After watching years of hand wringing over the 75%, I think DC should stop laying all responsibility on DCPS and instead implement a systemic effort to reprogram the parenting mores of that 75%. Ever single bit of public assistance -- from housing to food stamps-- should be coupled to mandatory parenting classes about what it takes to raise children to responsible adulthood and the values that parents need to demonstrate as role models.
No school-- Latin, Basis or KIPP-- can replace decent parenting. The woeful performance of DCPS students is not a schools problem, it a parenting problem---and not one single DC politician has the guts to say it.
Anonymous wrote:Concur! For all the haters, what do you hold up as a better example of a successful, diverse charter school?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes, just like Wilson which attracts kids from all over. Great spot--on Red Line and on Wisconsin Ave. Bus line. If you have a better spot, why don't you propose it and build it? these things called charter actually take effort you know.
It has been SO difficult for charters to get good spaces. Despite a law that required DCPS to give charters first priority for empty space, DCPS stonewalled during the Fenty years and for part of the Gray administration. Part of it was institutional hostility to charters from the school bureaucracy and a lot of it was that favored developers called in chits with the mayors' offices to get choice DCPS properties put up for sale. On top of that, charters have no capital budget for purchases and renovations. So they have to raise the money themselves and finance the rest, which is tough. It took Latin a while to find its permanent home. Moreover, when Latin rented on 16th St, they were in two buildings that were some distance apart, so I don't think that Latin has any appetite for a second, split campus.
Anonymous wrote:After watching years of hand wringing over the 75%, I think DC should stop laying all responsibility on DCPS and instead implement a systemic effort to reprogram the parenting mores of that 75%. Ever single bit of public assistance -- from housing to food stamps-- should be coupled to mandatory parenting classes about what it takes to raise children to responsible adulthood and the values that parents need to demonstrate as role models.
No school-- Latin, Basis or KIPP-- can replace decent parenting. The woeful performance of DCPS students is not a schools problem, it a parenting problem---and not one single DC politician has the guts to say it.
Anonymous wrote:Since the public schools are failing them the city needs more charter or more specialized public schools. To put the onus on existing successful schools.is kind of unfair.
Anonymous wrote:Ditto to middle class kids - for some reason they aren't seen as worthy of a free and good public education. I've never understood the ' they can just go to private or move' thing.
Anonymous wrote:Since the public schools are failing them the city needs more charter or more specialized public schools. To put the onus on existing successful schools.is kind of unfair.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ditto to middle class kids - for some reason they aren't seen as worthy of a free and good public education. I've never understood the ' they can just go to private or move' thing.
It's about the numbers. 74% are economically at risk. If you want to move the needle or whatever the metaphor du jour is, you have to focus on that.
Anonymous wrote:Ditto to middle class kids - for some reason they aren't seen as worthy of a free and good public education. I've never understood the ' they can just go to private or move' thing.