Not a Blair parent OR a W parent and I have no dog in the fight, but it is truly astounding that anyone would consider the Blair neighborhood to be in decline or consider it to be a bad school. By any objective measure, it’s one of the top schools in the area.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The school system matters, too. I have heard wonderful things about Howard County. It's budget is a more manageable $700-800 million. MCPS's operating budget is over $2 billion, I think. It's not hard to understand how it's become a more bloated, more inefficient bureaucracy.
This is really important. School systems that are smaller are so much better! Large school systems take on a monopolistic culture. They exist to serve themselves not the students. A lot of the shady crap that MCPS pulls both educationally and financially just isn't possible in a smaller system.
In MCPS lower scores usually correlate with crime being in the schools. I would never trust a Silver Spring poster on this board recommending one of the schools where the police are there several times every month! In Howard if the scores aren't the top ones but there isn't the same crime going on then I would ask more parents about it and consider the school.
Howard cannot compete with MoCo.
Blair alone will knock every Howard school out of the ballpark
Blair is a shit hole in the edge of PG, it will take more than importing a few hundred kids from the Bethesda/Potomac area to fix that sinking ship
Ha, ha, ha, what sinking ship?
Every year Blair is getting more NMSFs, more presidential scholars, more Intel scholars, more academic awards and putting HoCo schools to shame.
But keep yapping about shit-hole and PG. You sound just like your president.
he is your president too and lets see how good Blair's magnet does as the neighborhood continues to slip and Bethesda/Potomac Parents give up trying to follow all the new rules as the DCC tries to steer the seats to others with a lesser peer group! (Even the county calls DCC kids an unsatisfactory peer group if you read between the lines). Notices how the last 13 NMSF came form West county as did the major other Scholarship winner last year. It isn't the local Blair kids propping up that program sweety.
But Blair had 41 NMSF. You do the math.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Decisive and strong principal,
Excellent teachers,
Good curriculum,
Motivated students,
Involved parents.
We have all these things in our Gaithersburg ES. It has a GS rating of a 5.
Gaithersburg ES parents seem really happy with the school. Goes to show that things like GS ratings and FARMs rates don’t capture the full picture.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Decisive and strong principal,
Excellent teachers,
Good curriculum,
Motivated students,
Involved parents.
We have all these things in our Gaithersburg ES. It has a GS rating of a 5.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The school system matters, too. I have heard wonderful things about Howard County. It's budget is a more manageable $700-800 million. MCPS's operating budget is over $2 billion, I think. It's not hard to understand how it's become a more bloated, more inefficient bureaucracy.
This is really important. School systems that are smaller are so much better! Large school systems take on a monopolistic culture. They exist to serve themselves not the students. A lot of the shady crap that MCPS pulls both educationally and financially just isn't possible in a smaller system.
In MCPS lower scores usually correlate with crime being in the schools. I would never trust a Silver Spring poster on this board recommending one of the schools where the police are there several times every month! In Howard if the scores aren't the top ones but there isn't the same crime going on then I would ask more parents about it and consider the school.
Howard cannot compete with MoCo.
Blair alone will knock every Howard school out of the ballpark
Blair is a shit hole in the edge of PG, it will take more than importing a few hundred kids from the Bethesda/Potomac area to fix that sinking ship
Ha, ha, ha, what sinking ship?
Every year Blair is getting more NMSFs, more presidential scholars, more Intel scholars, more academic awards and putting HoCo schools to shame.
But keep yapping about shit-hole and PG. You sound just like your president.
he is your president too and lets see how good Blair's magnet does as the neighborhood continues to slip and Bethesda/Potomac Parents give up trying to follow all the new rules as the DCC tries to steer the seats to others with a lesser peer group! (Even the county calls DCC kids an unsatisfactory peer group if you read between the lines). Notices how the last 13 NMSF came form West county as did the major other Scholarship winner last year. It isn't the local Blair kids propping up that program sweety.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The school system matters, too. I have heard wonderful things about Howard County. It's budget is a more manageable $700-800 million. MCPS's operating budget is over $2 billion, I think. It's not hard to understand how it's become a more bloated, more inefficient bureaucracy.
This is really important. School systems that are smaller are so much better! Large school systems take on a monopolistic culture. They exist to serve themselves not the students. A lot of the shady crap that MCPS pulls both educationally and financially just isn't possible in a smaller system.
In MCPS lower scores usually correlate with crime being in the schools. I would never trust a Silver Spring poster on this board recommending one of the schools where the police are there several times every month! In Howard if the scores aren't the top ones but there isn't the same crime going on then I would ask more parents about it and consider the school.
Howard cannot compete with MoCo.
Blair alone will knock every Howard school out of the ballpark
Blair is a shit hole in the edge of PG, it will take more than importing a few hundred kids from the Bethesda/Potomac area to fix that sinking ship
Ha, ha, ha, what sinking ship?
Every year Blair is getting more NMSFs, more presidential scholars, more Intel scholars, more academic awards and putting HoCo schools to shame.
But keep yapping about shit-hole and PG. You sound just like your president.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How about this for the truth, I want a school filled with kids that will be successful. Not just some who want or wish to be successful.
Show me a school filled with rich white kids and I’ll show you a school filled with way above average success rates. Show me a school not that and I’ll show you average to below average success rates almost without exception. Life is a numbers game and one would be wise to play the odds.
Spare me your anecdotal examples to the contrary. Most elite levels of society are filled by very few archetypes from pretty predictable pedigrees. It is true success doesn’t always bring happiness but failure almost always brings misery.
A good school, for me, is a school without parents like this.
There is nothing more toxic to learning than the attitude that it's all a race, and you cannot win unless others lose.
Practically, I like a school with a strong and caring principal.
But really, I ignore the term "good schools" because it's primarily used either by real estate agents or naive parents to mean "white and/or Asian schools where I can feel safe my child will be guaranteed to do well, away from the negative influences of people who make less than $100k."
There is a lot of data out there that shows more diverse companies and companies with more diverse boards do better: take on less risk, have higher profits, etc. I work for one of the top four consulting firms and they are hell bent on diversity, and it's not just a brand thing. They want more women and people of color taking on leadership roles, they think it is vital to the future. So it's interesting that some people think the key to successful schools are to have only rich white kids.
Anonymous wrote:
HoCo is not very diverse in terms of SES. It's much easier to deal with smaller and less diverse SES student body. I suppose if that's your goal (no SES diversity), then HoCo is probably your type of school district.
For us, we left a school district that was mostly upper SES (different state) because 1. there are issues in high SES schools that are unique to such schools 2. even with all that wealth, the test scores weren't all that high.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The school system matters, too. I have heard wonderful things about Howard County. It's budget is a more manageable $700-800 million. MCPS's operating budget is over $2 billion, I think. It's not hard to understand how it's become a more bloated, more inefficient bureaucracy.
This is really important. School systems that are smaller are so much better! Large school systems take on a monopolistic culture. They exist to serve themselves not the students. A lot of the shady crap that MCPS pulls both educationally and financially just isn't possible in a smaller system.
In MCPS lower scores usually correlate with crime being in the schools. I would never trust a Silver Spring poster on this board recommending one of the schools where the police are there several times every month! In Howard if the scores aren't the top ones but there isn't the same crime going on then I would ask more parents about it and consider the school.
Howard cannot compete with MoCo.
Blair alone will knock every Howard school out of the ballpark
Blair is a shit hole in the edge of PG, it will take more than importing a few hundred kids from the Bethesda/Potomac area to fix that sinking ship
Anonymous wrote:The school system matters, too. I have heard wonderful things about Howard County. It's budget is a more manageable $700-800 million. MCPS's operating budget is over $2 billion, I think. It's not hard to understand how it's become a more bloated, more inefficient bureaucracy.
This is really important. School systems that are smaller are so much better! Large school systems take on a monopolistic culture. They exist to serve themselves not the students. A lot of the shady crap that MCPS pulls both educationally and financially just isn't possible in a smaller system.
In MCPS lower scores usually correlate with crime being in the schools. I would never trust a Silver Spring poster on this board recommending one of the schools where the police are there several times every month! In Howard if the scores aren't the top ones but there isn't the same crime going on then I would ask more parents about it and consider the school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The school system matters, too. I have heard wonderful things about Howard County. It's budget is a more manageable $700-800 million. MCPS's operating budget is over $2 billion, I think. It's not hard to understand how it's become a more bloated, more inefficient bureaucracy.
This is really important. School systems that are smaller are so much better! Large school systems take on a monopolistic culture. They exist to serve themselves not the students. A lot of the shady crap that MCPS pulls both educationally and financially just isn't possible in a smaller system.
In MCPS lower scores usually correlate with crime being in the schools. I would never trust a Silver Spring poster on this board recommending one of the schools where the police are there several times every month! In Howard if the scores aren't the top ones but there isn't the same crime going on then I would ask more parents about it and consider the school.
Howard cannot compete with MoCo.
Blair alone will knock every Howard school out of the ballpark
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
A neighborhood where parents care about their children's education and have the money to invest in it.
There's no secret. It's not the school itself, they all follow the same program and have the same teachers. It's the community that changes the nature of the school.
The end.
I have met very few parents who don't care about their children's education.
Right, but I think the second part of PP's answer is critical. Everyone wants what's best for their kids, but unfortunately if they don't have the money to invest in their kid's educations, the outcomes won't necessarily be all that great. You need both.
This is crap. We have these things called free public schools and libraries. I grew up poor, with teen parents and lots of other kids did too. No music lessons or outside sports, but I was rode my bike to the library every Saturday and checked out a pile of books. Ended up at Stanford and then two grad degrees. Don't demean poor people by placing no expectations on them. Kids need to do their homework and ask teachers for help and they will do fine, regardless of their parents. And yes, there are lots of parents who didn't take school seriously themselves and see no reason for their child to do so.
Anonymous wrote:I’m still trying to figure this out. For me it goes beyond the test score listed on great schools. What else makes up a good school? We are house shopping and see some with lower scores but the community loves the school, while others say they don’t want anything to do with the school because of the score. I live in Howard County.
Anonymous wrote:The school system matters, too. I have heard wonderful things about Howard County. It's budget is a more manageable $700-800 million. MCPS's operating budget is over $2 billion, I think. It's not hard to understand how it's become a more bloated, more inefficient bureaucracy.
This is really important. School systems that are smaller are so much better! Large school systems take on a monopolistic culture. They exist to serve themselves not the students. A lot of the shady crap that MCPS pulls both educationally and financially just isn't possible in a smaller system.
In MCPS lower scores usually correlate with crime being in the schools. I would never trust a Silver Spring poster on this board recommending one of the schools where the police are there several times every month! In Howard if the scores aren't the top ones but there isn't the same crime going on then I would ask more parents about it and consider the school.