Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:More "progressive charter" curricula for MS & HS? Washington Latin's curriculum looks a whole lot like the one my devout Catholic grandfather followed in the 1920s! All that school Latin helped him enter a seminary afterwards, until he decided not to graduate to become a priest. We want our children to study modern languages and current affairs in school. BASIS' STEM heavy curriculum is really weak on English lit. From where I sit, DCPS' MS and HS curriculum isn't the problem - lack of academic rigor is, and in a big way.
Surely you know that students at Latin also study an additional language, and that current events are a major part of the curriculum?
There’s a poster who always pipes in on these threads to talk about how weak Basis is and how old-fashioned Latin is. I’m sure Stuart-Hobson will be fine for you, but why dump on other people’s choices all the time? Where other people send their children doesn’t have anything to do with yours.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:NP. The big picture matters.
We could have seen these sort of early college acceptances from DCPS programs this year if city leaders were serious about injecting real rigor for high achievers into DCPS K-12 programs across the District.
They aren't.
Maybe. But keep in mind that about half of BASIS students (and the BDC alums who are at selective colleges now) were in DCPS schools from PK-4 or 5. And many BDC students go back to DCPS for high school.
Come on DCPS booster, preK -4 or 5 is not where it’s at to get into the top colleges. Please....
It’s a rigorous middle school curriculum compounded on top of a even more rigorous high school experience. That’s not happening in DCPS and why there is silence on the Wilson front of kids getting into top schools ED.
What an odd thing to post directly after the poster noting the 4 Wilson kids admitted to Yale.
Huh? No way Wilson got 4 kids into Yale early.
Anonymous wrote:More "progressive charter" curricula for MS & HS? Washington Latin's curriculum looks a whole lot like the one my devout Catholic grandfather followed in the 1920s! All that school Latin helped him enter a seminary afterwards, until he decided not to graduate to become a priest. We want our children to study modern languages and current affairs in school. BASIS' STEM heavy curriculum is really weak on English lit. From where I sit, DCPS' MS and HS curriculum isn't the problem - lack of academic rigor is, and in a big way.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:NP. The big picture matters.
We could have seen these sort of early college acceptances from DCPS programs this year if city leaders were serious about injecting real rigor for high achievers into DCPS K-12 programs across the District.
They aren't.
Maybe. But keep in mind that about half of BASIS students (and the BDC alums who are at selective colleges now) were in DCPS schools from PK-4 or 5. And many BDC students go back to DCPS for high school.
Come on DCPS booster, preK -4 or 5 is not where it’s at to get into the top colleges. Please....
It’s a rigorous middle school curriculum compounded on top of a even more rigorous high school experience. That’s not happening in DCPS and why there is silence on the Wilson front of kids getting into top schools ED.
What an odd thing to post directly after the poster noting the 4 Wilson kids admitted to Yale.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:NP. The big picture matters.
We could have seen these sort of early college acceptances from DCPS programs this year if city leaders were serious about injecting real rigor for high achievers into DCPS K-12 programs across the District.
They aren't.
Maybe. But keep in mind that about half of BASIS students (and the BDC alums who are at selective colleges now) were in DCPS schools from PK-4 or 5. And many BDC students go back to DCPS for high school.
Come on DCPS booster, preK -4 or 5 is not where it’s at to get into the top colleges. Please....
It’s a rigorous middle school curriculum compounded on top of a even more rigorous high school experience. That’s not happening in DCPS and why there is silence on the Wilson front of kids getting into top schools ED.
What an odd thing to post directly after the poster noting the 4 Wilson kids admitted to Yale.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:NP. The big picture matters.
We could have seen these sort of early college acceptances from DCPS programs this year if city leaders were serious about injecting real rigor for high achievers into DCPS K-12 programs across the District.
They aren't.
Maybe. But keep in mind that about half of BASIS students (and the BDC alums who are at selective colleges now) were in DCPS schools from PK-4 or 5. And many BDC students go back to DCPS for high school.
Come on DCPS booster, preK -4 or 5 is not where it’s at to get into the top colleges. Please....
It’s a rigorous middle school curriculum compounded on top of a even more rigorous high school experience. That’s not happening in DCPS and why there is silence on the Wilson front of kids getting into top schools ED.
Anonymous wrote:Walls doesn’t have great facilities either. Just one building
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:NP. The big picture matters.
We could have seen these sort of early college acceptances from DCPS programs this year if city leaders were serious about injecting real rigor for high achievers into DCPS K-12 programs across the District.
They aren't.
Maybe. But keep in mind that about half of BASIS students (and the BDC alums who are at selective colleges now) were in DCPS schools from PK-4 or 5. And many BDC students go back to DCPS for high school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not buying it. You're in no position to know how many got in early without being a Yale admissions officer, which you aren't.
Incorrect. Yale tells all alumni interviewers in DC that info. 18 kids from 9 schools.
which 9 schools do you think these are?
The ones I know for sure are:
Wilson
Basis
Sidwell
GDS
NCS
St. Albans
NCS
Which other 2?
Walls?
?
Anonymous wrote:NP. The big picture matters.
We could have seen these sort of early college acceptances from DCPS programs this year if city leaders were serious about injecting real rigor for high achievers into DCPS K-12 programs across the District.
They aren't.
Anonymous wrote:Walls doesn’t have great facilities either. Just one building
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not buying it. You're in no position to know how many got in early without being a Yale admissions officer, which you aren't.
Incorrect. Yale tells all alumni interviewers in DC that info. 18 kids from 9 schools.