Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What about a lottery only system for high school? Students can apply to a special focus program or one of 4 comprehensive high schools.
High school students can travel independently -- most do already.
Turn Wilson into a middle/elementary school to deal with WOTP crowding.
We are at a Wilson feeder and I think that's a great idea. You could have innovative programming at different high schools, which kids could select based on interest. It would make the test in schools stronger too. It would be much fairer from an equity standpoint too.
But DCPS would have to be OK colocating schools, since no one elementary or middle school should be big enough to fill the building.
Anonymous wrote:What about a lottery only system for high school? Students can apply to a special focus program or one of 4 comprehensive high schools.
High school students can travel independently -- most do already.
Turn Wilson into a middle/elementary school to deal with WOTP crowding.
Anonymous wrote:Hey Nick! Do you have anything whatsover to say about the increase in segregation in San Francisco after they imposed the same idea that you're proposing? Do you care AT ALL about that?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What about a lottery only system for high school? Students can apply to a special focus program or one of 4 comprehensive high schools.
High school students can travel independently -- most do already.
Turn Wilson into a middle/elementary school to deal with WOTP crowding.
No, but thanks. The kids that drive Wilson's moderately successful test scores won't stick around hoping to lottery into a decent program. We certainly wouldn't have.
I remember saying this to the former deputy mayor for education, and she seemed really non-plussed by the idea that the parents that DCPS wants actually have choices and won't accept uncertainty. Although I'm sure she must have heard the same thing dozens of times before, she acted like she hadn't.
You are in the minority. 75% of all students in DC are not in their IB school. And the numbers are even higher for high school given the number of application school students.
More importantly, the city frankly doesn't care if a few thousand families IB for Wilson leave any more than they would care if I left my EOTP house due to school choices I didn't like. There are plenty of people who will buy both our homes and the city will make money on the transaction fees.
The metric you are citing just isn't one that matters to the city.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What about a lottery only system for high school? Students can apply to a special focus program or one of 4 comprehensive high schools.
High school students can travel independently -- most do already.
Turn Wilson into a middle/elementary school to deal with WOTP crowding.
No, but thanks. The kids that drive Wilson's moderately successful test scores won't stick around hoping to lottery into a decent program. We certainly wouldn't have.
I remember saying this to the former deputy mayor for education, and she seemed really non-plussed by the idea that the parents that DCPS wants actually have choices and won't accept uncertainty. Although I'm sure she must have heard the same thing dozens of times before, she acted like she hadn't.
You are in the minority. 75% of all students in DC are not in their IB school. And the numbers are even higher for high school given the number of application school students.
More importantly, the city frankly doesn't care if a few thousand families IB for Wilson leave any more than they would care if I left my EOTP house due to school choices I didn't like. There are plenty of people who will buy both our homes and the city will make money on the transaction fees.
The metric you are citing just isn't one that matters to the city.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What about a lottery only system for high school? Students can apply to a special focus program or one of 4 comprehensive high schools.
High school students can travel independently -- most do already.
Turn Wilson into a middle/elementary school to deal with WOTP crowding.
No, but thanks. The kids that drive Wilson's moderately successful test scores won't stick around hoping to lottery into a decent program. We certainly wouldn't have.
I remember saying this to the former deputy mayor for education, and she seemed really non-plussed by the idea that the parents that DCPS wants actually have choices and won't accept uncertainty. Although I'm sure she must have heard the same thing dozens of times before, she acted like she hadn't.
Anonymous wrote:What about a lottery only system for high school? Students can apply to a special focus program or one of 4 comprehensive high schools.
High school students can travel independently -- most do already.
Turn Wilson into a middle/elementary school to deal with WOTP crowding.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DCPS has to develop a better method for evaluating residency. They should develop software that will check all enrollment against tax records, DMV, and SNAP benefits. Any address discrepancies are thoroughly evaluated.
You mean like the OSSE/OTR website that doesn't have its security credentials properly registered?
ossedctax.com
Yes but I don’t know what the site looks like because I’m not using it without security certificates! DCPS should get certificates and only allow people to go through it, unless they’re homeless.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Nick, you mean well, but overcrowing is a WOTP issue and I don't think overhauling the whole system for everyone is going to be acceptable EOTP and EOTR. If you think people in Ward 3 will accept a lottery assignment at Ballou, think again.
The answer IMO is to strengthen the existing schools so that people want to attend, and to consider reopening or expanding spaces that are available, as needed. If Wilson-zoned parents cared more about quality elsewhere, it could happen. But you seem to assume Ward 3 conditions of overcrowing and no more spaces apply everywhere. That just isn't true.
Nick here.
Today DCPS has 13,000 empty seats so you could argue that any crowding is a policy issue not a facilities issue. But if the projections hold, in eight years those empty seats are going to be gone. This will be a new historic era for DCPS. There may be policy challenges, but there are going to be real facilities issues-- and not just WOTP.
I believe in neighborhood-based schools, for a lot of reasons. But right now nobody at any level of city government is doing the things that will need to be done to keep them a viable option.
Anonymous wrote:The only reason I live in the city is so that I have a walkable lifestyle. I want to walk my kids to school. Not drive. So I bought a house that had inbound schools that I liked. Take that away for an all-lottery system and I'm leaving the city.