Anonymous wrote:The committee hasn’t discussed things at that level of detail yet, so nobody knows the answer. At the last meeting the consultants said they would devise various scenarios and then the committee would discuss in September. So that will be where some of these details become on the table.
But I’d say any requests for another MS to feed JR or MacArthur will run into a fundamental question of what is the citywide vision. It’s not possible for everyone who wants to feed to those schools to do it - or Deal & Hardy. “Alice Deal for All” does not literally mean Deal and its HS are so large that all DCPS students go there.
So if some more people got rights to WOTP schools then what does that mean for the next group of people one neighborhood farther east? The ideal scenario is that eventually othet HS become comparable in reputation (some educators argue they are already as good in actual education, though that’s tough to really evaluate rigorously). Is there a path to achieve that?
Moving the next set of parents to have rights across the park doesn’t lead to a gradual chain of future actions that eventually leads to a stable education system - the only stable end point in that direction is “Deal for All Literally” which is impossible.
So, what is the action the committee can take this year which puts the system on a trajectory to continue a positive direction, from the viewpoint of all parents in all wards, that then continues the next time boundaries change and the next time and so on?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The other high schools are not as good in actual education, because they do not offer the same coursework. Their "advanced" classes are only pretend-advanced.
Also, are there specific examples you can cite? I’ve been wanting to better pin down these differences and it would be helpful to have some specific examples I can run down further.
Every school where most kids fail the Algebra I PARCC is an example. You say you are providing quality and grade-level instruction. Yet they fail. Why?
“Do most kids fail the Algebra I PARCC” is a terrible metric if your goal is to get more high school tracking.
My 9th grader got a 5 on the Algebra II PARCC at a high school where most students who took the Algebra I PARCC failed it. If my child had been forced to repeat Algebra I, the Algebra I proficiency rate surely would have gone up. Is that what you want? No, it’s the exact opposite of what you want.
The number you want to look at is the pass rate for 9th graders taking math PARCCs other than Algebra I. That’s what will tell you if the school is successfully teaching its strongest students at the level they are capable of.
No one wants your kid to repeat Algebra I. But we want kids enrolled in Algebra I to actually learn the subject. That’s clearly not happening.
Anonymous wrote:The answer is tracking. It’s the way to separate kids by ability level and the teacher can focus the curriculum at that level.
But we can’t have that because it’s not equitable. So let’s socially promote everyone, put everyone in the same class, and those that have options leave DCPS altogether.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The other high schools are not as good in actual education, because they do not offer the same coursework. Their "advanced" classes are only pretend-advanced.
Also, are there specific examples you can cite? I’ve been wanting to better pin down these differences and it would be helpful to have some specific examples I can run down further.
Every school where most kids fail the Algebra I PARCC is an example. You say you are providing quality and grade-level instruction. Yet they fail. Why?
NP with another example. I’ve observed in many DCPS classrooms. I’ve seen AP classes in some schools that are covering material that should be learned in September in March. Clearly that is not teaching the AP class. It also sets those kids up for failure in college because they’ve been told they took the course. But they really haven’t.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Again, the only thing that will cause change is to credibly promise and deliver coursework that is on and above grade level to children who are at that level. That will make a difference. And you can do that now, if you are willing to spend the money.
I think a lot of committee members share this view, including the EOTR members who want DCPS to offer the same level of coursework and programming that people in certain other parts of the city seem to get. A big area of discussion for the committee is how far people from 7 & 8 travel for school and how to reduce that, not by taking away opportunity but providing what those parents want for their kids, which is a great education.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The other high schools are not as good in actual education, because they do not offer the same coursework. Their "advanced" classes are only pretend-advanced.
Also, are there specific examples you can cite? I’ve been wanting to better pin down these differences and it would be helpful to have some specific examples I can run down further.
Every school where most kids fail the Algebra I PARCC is an example. You say you are providing quality and grade-level instruction. Yet they fail. Why?
“Do most kids fail the Algebra I PARCC” is a terrible metric if your goal is to get more high school tracking.
My 9th grader got a 5 on the Algebra II PARCC at a high school where most students who took the Algebra I PARCC failed it. If my child had been forced to repeat Algebra I, the Algebra I proficiency rate surely would have gone up. Is that what you want? No, it’s the exact opposite of what you want.
The number you want to look at is the pass rate for 9th graders taking math PARCCs other than Algebra I. That’s what will tell you if the school is successfully teaching its strongest students at the level they are capable of.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The other high schools are not as good in actual education, because they do not offer the same coursework. Their "advanced" classes are only pretend-advanced.
Also, are there specific examples you can cite? I’ve been wanting to better pin down these differences and it would be helpful to have some specific examples I can run down further.
Every school where most kids fail the Algebra I PARCC is an example. You say you are providing quality and grade-level instruction. Yet they fail. Why?
“Do most kids fail the Algebra I PARCC” is a terrible metric if your goal is to get more high school tracking.
My 9th grader got a 5 on the Algebra II PARCC at a high school where most students who took the Algebra I PARCC failed it. If my child had been forced to repeat Algebra I, the Algebra I proficiency rate surely would have gone up. Is that what you want? No, it’s the exact opposite of what you want.
The number you want to look at is the pass rate for 9th graders taking math PARCCs other than Algebra I. That’s what will tell you if the school is successfully teaching its strongest students at the level they are capable of.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The other high schools are not as good in actual education, because they do not offer the same coursework. Their "advanced" classes are only pretend-advanced.
Also, are there specific examples you can cite? I’ve been wanting to better pin down these differences and it would be helpful to have some specific examples I can run down further.
Every school where most kids fail the Algebra I PARCC is an example. You say you are providing quality and grade-level instruction. Yet they fail. Why?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The other high schools are not as good in actual education, because they do not offer the same coursework. Their "advanced" classes are only pretend-advanced.
Also, are there specific examples you can cite? I’ve been wanting to better pin down these differences and it would be helpful to have some specific examples I can run down further.
Every school where most kids fail the Algebra I PARCC is an example. You say you are providing quality and grade-level instruction. Yet they fail. Why?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The other high schools are not as good in actual education, because they do not offer the same coursework. Their "advanced" classes are only pretend-advanced.
Also, are there specific examples you can cite? I’ve been wanting to better pin down these differences and it would be helpful to have some specific examples I can run down further.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The other high schools are not as good in actual education, because they do not offer the same coursework. Their "advanced" classes are only pretend-advanced.
Also, are there specific examples you can cite? I’ve been wanting to better pin down these differences and it would be helpful to have some specific examples I can run down further.
Anonymous wrote:The other high schools are not as good in actual education, because they do not offer the same coursework. Their "advanced" classes are only pretend-advanced.
Anonymous wrote:Again, the only thing that will cause change is to credibly promise and deliver coursework that is on and above grade level to children who are at that level. That will make a difference. And you can do that now, if you are willing to spend the money.