Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:When you have so many charters, it’s hard for neighborhood schools to get a critical mass of high achieving students. There are no charters in the Wilson area, so it’s easier for those neighborhood schools to thrive.
This! And the siphon off money too.
I don't mean to get conspiratorial, but if there was a BASIS in the Container Store location up there in Tenleytown, I imagine Ward 3 would have a different opinion about charters, more in line with us EOTP parents hoping for integration at Roosevelt, Dunbar, and Eastern, etc., but choosing Latin or Cap City or whatever instead.
I agree with you, but I think it would need to be a Latin to really peel people off.
Ward 3, and the rest of the more affluent Wilson feeder parents aren't going to love BASIS because it is too limited in extra-curricular and they think their kids will be fine without the more intense academic approach.
OTOH maybe they would shun Latin because it has uniforms.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:When you have so many charters, it’s hard for neighborhood schools to get a critical mass of high achieving students. There are no charters in the Wilson area, so it’s easier for those neighborhood schools to thrive.
This! And the siphon off money too.
I don't mean to get conspiratorial, but if there was a BASIS in the Container Store location up there in Tenleytown, I imagine Ward 3 would have a different opinion about charters, more in line with us EOTP parents hoping for integration at Roosevelt, Dunbar, and Eastern, etc., but choosing Latin or Cap City or whatever instead.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:When you have so many charters, it’s hard for neighborhood schools to get a critical mass of high achieving students. There are no charters in the Wilson area, so it’s easier for those neighborhood schools to thrive.
This! And the siphon off money too.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:When you have so many charters, it’s hard for neighborhood schools to get a critical mass of high achieving students. There are no charters in the Wilson area, so it’s easier for those neighborhood schools to thrive.
This! And the siphon off money too.
Anonymous wrote:When you have so many charters, it’s hard for neighborhood schools to get a critical mass of high achieving students. There are no charters in the Wilson area, so it’s easier for those neighborhood schools to thrive.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Tax and redistribute a portion of PTA donations. Enforce a minimum at risk %Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:These schools are gentrifying fast. Especially Francis-Stevens which has little to no affordable housing in boundary. DCPS needs a plan to maintain diversity in schools across the city. The neighborhood school system is grossly inequitable. See discussion above re fund raising capacity of PTAs WotP v. other areas.Anonymous wrote:it is happening school by school. Look at the in boundary wait lists for PK at schools like Marie Reed, Garrison and Walls at Francis Stevens.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does the Wilson PTO have hiring authority for aides as well? For us, middle school is the issue. it’s simply too crowded.
No.
So as the city gentrifies, DCPS needs to bring back bussing in order for schools to be diverse? How about creating strong and good schools in ALL neighborhoods?
My family in NYC has kids in fancy Manhattan public schools -- they were told to cease and desist hiring staff with PTA $ by the city.
yes - this is long overdue in DC as well. There is a group of parents who are trying to work with WOTP schools to share some of their wealth with less affluent schools - can't remember where I read the article otherwise I'd post the link. It's an interim measure because I do think ultimately PTAs should not be allowed to fund staff.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:More and more Elementary schools are decent
Middle school wise
Capitol Hill area more and more folks are choosing Stuart Hobson and Jefferson. They both have some type of differentiation/honors component
As far as EOTP is concerned yall need to coordinate and pick one middle school for all the higher achievers to take over and flip Cardozo, Columbia Heights, Brookland, MicKinley, or New North. The numbers area there you just need to pick one of those options and swarm it
High School works because of all the test-in select school options
Agree that SH and Jefferson are next. The normal MS options are getting harder to lottery in, & combined with the honors track, makes both more viable.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The PTA $ issue has been getting a lot of talk here lately , and it is so absurd. Take out PatA funds, and the only thing you’ve impacted is the level of envy.
The PTA budgets are a drop in the bucket in the big scheme of things, and eliminating those funds does absolutely nothing to improve educational outcomes (and arguably hurts them).
Cool then why all the fundraising
Anonymous wrote:The PTA $ issue has been getting a lot of talk here lately , and it is so absurd. Take out PatA funds, and the only thing you’ve impacted is the level of envy.
The PTA budgets are a drop in the bucket in the big scheme of things, and eliminating those funds does absolutely nothing to improve educational outcomes (and arguably hurts them).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Tax and redistribute a portion of PTA donations. Enforce a minimum at risk %Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:These schools are gentrifying fast. Especially Francis-Stevens which has little to no affordable housing in boundary. DCPS needs a plan to maintain diversity in schools across the city. The neighborhood school system is grossly inequitable. See discussion above re fund raising capacity of PTAs WotP v. other areas.Anonymous wrote:it is happening school by school. Look at the in boundary wait lists for PK at schools like Marie Reed, Garrison and Walls at Francis Stevens.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does the Wilson PTO have hiring authority for aides as well? For us, middle school is the issue. it’s simply too crowded.
No.
So as the city gentrifies, DCPS needs to bring back bussing in order for schools to be diverse? How about creating strong and good schools in ALL neighborhoods?
My family in NYC has kids in fancy Manhattan public schools -- they were told to cease and desist hiring staff with PTA $ by the city.
Anonymous wrote:Tax and redistribute a portion of PTA donations. Enforce a minimum at risk %Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:These schools are gentrifying fast. Especially Francis-Stevens which has little to no affordable housing in boundary. DCPS needs a plan to maintain diversity in schools across the city. The neighborhood school system is grossly inequitable. See discussion above re fund raising capacity of PTAs WotP v. other areas.Anonymous wrote:it is happening school by school. Look at the in boundary wait lists for PK at schools like Marie Reed, Garrison and Walls at Francis Stevens.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does the Wilson PTO have hiring authority for aides as well? For us, middle school is the issue. it’s simply too crowded.
No.
So as the city gentrifies, DCPS needs to bring back bussing in order for schools to be diverse? How about creating strong and good schools in ALL neighborhoods?