Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s been undesirable since the 80s, it tries but simply too much low income housing around there. Many of the middle class opt out to cheap 2nd tier privates like grace
I don’t know a single family in our ESS-zoned neighborhood who sends their kids to private.
I don’t either.
You most likely don’t know many of your neighbors. If you don’t live a few houses down or meet at the school your chances of crossing get slim fast.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How long do these principal searches typically take?
A few months. I don't think the ESS principal position was ever posted though. They will probably post it during this school year and hire a permanent principal, who may or may not be the acting principal.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s been undesirable since the 80s, it tries but simply too much low income housing around there. Many of the middle class opt out to cheap 2nd tier privates like grace
I don’t know a single family in our ESS-zoned neighborhood who sends their kids to private.
I don’t either.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s been undesirable since the 80s, it tries but simply too much low income housing around there. Many of the middle class opt out to cheap 2nd tier privates like grace
I don’t know a single family in our ESS-zoned neighborhood who sends their kids to private.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Th acting principal has no idea what she is doing. She’s obsessed with tracking kids (putting low kids with low kids, high kids with high kids) all while wanting to basically eliminate direct instruction. She thinks the “real learning” happens in small groups. Great, except what are only low kids going to learn from their peers? This is why tracking is not best practice. She tends to throw anything out there to see if it sticks and then backtracks because none of her ideas actually work. There’s a reason so many staff members left this year. She doesn’t know the curriculum. She has no business being a leader.
Can confirm. She’s a disaster. She also selected to keep doing Leader in Me. I felt like my soul was dying during the mandated training. The kids absolutely hate it. I have no idea why anyone would opt to keep the program.
Anonymous wrote:How long do these principal searches typically take?
Anonymous wrote:It’s been undesirable since the 80s, it tries but simply too much low income housing around there. Many of the middle class opt out to cheap 2nd tier privates like grace
Anonymous wrote:Th acting principal has no idea what she is doing. She’s obsessed with tracking kids (putting low kids with low kids, high kids with high kids) all while wanting to basically eliminate direct instruction. She thinks the “real learning” happens in small groups. Great, except what are only low kids going to learn from their peers? This is why tracking is not best practice. She tends to throw anything out there to see if it sticks and then backtracks because none of her ideas actually work. There’s a reason so many staff members left this year. She doesn’t know the curriculum. She has no business being a leader.
Anonymous wrote:I would really appreciate honest and objective feedback about ESS. The reviews about the school are sketchy and old. The academic rating is also kind of below or borderline of the MC band. How safe is the school and how accommodating and patient are the teachers towards children? My son is four and I am wondering if having him here will have a well-rounded impact on him. Is Sligo Creek a better option? Thank you all , I will be reading your comments.