Anonymous wrote:Why, 23:13?
People seem to have made up their minds and the news is a whole lot of nothing. Ward 3 doesn't need a new MS, no matter how much hand wringing takes place from IB families who overplayed their hand when running out Pope.
Hardy is making excellent strides every year, and anyone who doubts that is not directly involved with the school or its students.
If IB parents don't appreciate it, fine. Go elsewhere and pay the price.
I was at that meeting, too, and only one teacher spoke - who happened to be an award-winning teacher who demanded high quality work from the students and who would never advocate against IB children. And I can't remember if she spoke publicly during the meeting or to a reporter and was quoted in the paper. No, it was the parents who spoke up and we were angry at Rhee's incompetent management and what are now clearly lies about Pope's next assignment (arts middle school that never happened - thanks for removing a competent principal from DCPS kids for a year btw). Fwiw, I was a white high HHI OOB parent.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hardy is not perfect and needs many improvements but it's not a hell hole either. Kids can be rowdy but there's lots of good teaching going on. Hardy's not as well established or creative as Deal and it lacks some variety of after-school activities. But my kid feels safe there, is learning and wants to go to school. I wish Hardy were slightly more like Deal in terms of the class offerings and extra curricular stuff but on the whole we're pretty happy.
Are you IB or OOB? I'm IB, and I've followed Hardy for years, and my observation is that that there has been and continues to be a palpable anti-IB environment at the school. I was at the PTA meeting in 2010 when it was announced that Pope was being transferred, and I could not believe my ears at some of the things that were coming out of the mouths of teachers at that meeting. And those teachers are still at the school, and many continue to advocate against IB families. There is no way I would trust my children to them after hearing that.
Anonymous wrote:someone asked why OOB parents might put up with something not as good as Deal...well the bottom line is there just aren't enough good middle school slots in the city in charters or DCPS...it's hard to find the 'right' spot for your child and you sometimes make compromises that you have to live with. Hardy may not be for everyone but if it actually got more neighborhood support it could be great.
This is the real problem.
Anonymous wrote:Are you IB or OOB? I'm IB, and I've followed Hardy for years, and my observation is that that there has been and continues to be a palpable anti-IB environment at the school. I was at the PTA meeting in 2010 when it was announced that Pope was being transferred, and I could not believe my ears at some of the things that were coming out of the mouths of teachers at that meeting. And those teachers are still at the school, and many continue to advocate against IB families. There is no way I would trust my children to them after hearing that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We went on a tour of Hardy and a teacher openly dissed the school, its leadership, and the Chancellor. It made it hard to envision sending my kids there.
I went to the Hardy open house and it was very off-putting.
Anonymous wrote:We went on a tour of Hardy and a teacher openly dissed the school, its leadership, and the Chancellor. It made it hard to envision sending my kids there.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have been at Hardy afterschool a couple of time on the circulator. Yes there were some kids that lack "home training." But most were pretty well behaved. Probably these kids were from lower SES homes, but do you really think that these kids will taint your child?
I think children who behave this way would waste my child's time in class and create a negative environment outside of class. I think their behavior (and likely corresponding lack of academic preparation) will limit the pace and depth of academic work.
Anonymous wrote:I have been at Hardy afterschool a couple of time on the circulator. Yes there were some kids that lack "home training." But most were pretty well behaved. Probably these kids were from lower SES homes, but do you really think that these kids will taint your child?
Anonymous wrote:Hardy is not perfect and needs many improvements but it's not a hell hole either. Kids can be rowdy but there's lots of good teaching going on. Hardy's not as well established or creative as Deal and it lacks some variety of after-school activities. But my kid feels safe there, is learning and wants to go to school. I wish Hardy were slightly more like Deal in terms of the class offerings and extra curricular stuff but on the whole we're pretty happy.
Anonymous wrote:someone asked why OOB parents might put up with something not as good as Deal...well the bottom line is there just aren't enough good middle school slots in the city in charters or DCPS...it's hard to find the 'right' spot for your child and you sometimes make compromises that you have to live with. Hardy may not be for everyone but if it actually got more neighborhood support it could be great.