Anonymous wrote:When my kid went to a title 1 school EOTP, we never were asked to bring any school supplies at the start of school. It was provided for us.
And yes, my DS ate the free breakfast that was provided to all and the free lunch. Aftercare was free and dinner was free if needed. There was free PK-3 which saved a full year of preschool tuition.
There was a PTA but no one wanted to engage or fundraise. Nor could they because many families did not speak english and did not have extra money laying around.
Our DS got an excellent education and the teachers and resources were great. This was all without PTA money.
Anonymous wrote:This does not take into account that schools EOTP have free PK3, more funding per child, free meals, and many other resources that are not given to WOTP schools. And no one is complaining about that.
The reality is that WOTP schools are overcrowded and the parents have to make up the difference between what DCPS provides and what is needed.
I'll give you some examples of what our PTA funds are used for in our WOTP school: field trip costs because DCPS charges us for the bus, smartboard repairs because they break and we need them repaired, classroom supplies for teachers so they don't have to spend their own money, etc.
As parents, we are expected to bring a huge box of supplies for the school at the beginning of the year because IT IS NOT COVERED BY THE DCPS BUDGET. Clorox wipes, paper towels, tissues, dry erase markers, pencils, crayons, paper, and so on.
We still have the same DCPS curriculum as everyone else. We have overcrowded classrooms. Not sure what folks are up in arms about.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How do they know NW parents don’t vote for equal funding?? My kid goes to a dcps with a well funded PTA, and I would vote in additional funds for all of dcps in a second. The pta shaming is just a version of blaming “white women” for everything.
This is a little weird. I have a lot of admiration for the NYT editorial board, but their assertion here way oversimplifies the issue and the facts.
I've lived in D.C. for decades, and I've never seen a ballot for or against equal funding in D.C. schools. On this point, the NYT op-ed is based on a non-existent fact. It's like the blank piece in Scrabble: you can make a lot of impressive words with one of those! (but it's not a real word)
It is especially odd when you realize that a vote for literal equal funding would benefit the named schools and hurt others. So the article completely missed the point. There is a point to be made about PTA funding, but the way the article tries to frame is so factually incorrect that they miss the opportunity to actually address some real problems.
+1. Yes how ironic. Live EOTP and not WOTP BTW. Equal funding would actually help WOTP schools more. EOTP title 1 schools get much more money than WOTP from title 1 money, head start money up to this year, free meals, free ECE, etc...
I don’t grudge PTA’s that raise money for the school. It’s the parents money, not the city’s money.
People should realize that almost everywhere in the country, many of the things that WOTP PTA funds pay for is paid by the school district from the high taxes they collect from million dollar plus houses. In DC, WOTP schools get much less covered compared to their equivalent neighbirs in VA and MD.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:one actual barrier to equity is school boundaries and underenrolled middle schools. PTAs are to my mind essential for any hope of UMC buying in to changed boundaries because they represent parent voices.
Lol, can't imagine how Palisades and Crestwood wouldnrespondto getting de-zoned.
What we really need is middle school magnets and, in the really really low performing schools, a “back to the basics” approach. Meaning, teaching 7th graders addition and subtraction, phonics, etc. Not PC but the truth. Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How do they know NW parents don’t vote for equal funding?? My kid goes to a dcps with a well funded PTA, and I would vote in additional funds for all of dcps in a second. The pta shaming is just a version of blaming “white women” for everything.
This is a little weird. I have a lot of admiration for the NYT editorial board, but their assertion here way oversimplifies the issue and the facts.
I've lived in D.C. for decades, and I've never seen a ballot for or against equal funding in D.C. schools. On this point, the NYT op-ed is based on a non-existent fact. It's like the blank piece in Scrabble: you can make a lot of impressive words with one of those! (but it's not a real word)
It is especially odd when you realize that a vote for literal equal funding would benefit the named schools and hurt others. So the article completely missed the point. There is a point to be made about PTA funding, but the way the article tries to frame is so factually incorrect that they miss the opportunity to actually address some real problems.
Anonymous wrote:Harshburger!
Even in cities where the rich and poor continue to live under the same local government, economic segregation saps political support for common, egalitarian infrastructure. Rich New Yorkers donate generously to beautify Central Park while resisting the taxation necessary to maintain parks in neighborhoods they never visit. In Washington, D.C., parents in wealthier neighborhoods contribute lavishly to parent-teacher organizations that provide extra money to public schools in their neighborhoods, but they do not vote for a similar level of funding for all city schools. Two schools in northwest Washington each raised more than half a million dollars in 2017, while several schools in southeast Washington don’t even have parent-teacher organizations. Last year, for the third time since 1970, the residents of Gwinnett County, Ga., which sits on the edge of Atlanta, refused to fund an expansion of the regional transit system into their suburban county.
https://www.nytimes.com/2020/05/11/opinion/coronavirus-us-cities-inequality.html
Anonymous wrote:one actual barrier to equity is school boundaries and underenrolled middle schools. PTAs are to my mind essential for any hope of UMC buying in to changed boundaries because they represent parent voices.
Anonymous wrote:The entire point of the article is that city governments are not providing adequate infrastructure and services. That, of course, is true and is why NWDC parents started raising large sums of money to compensate in the first place. My oldest started DCPS in the early 2000s. It was nothing like it is now. Parents banded together out of sheer necessity.
Today, despite significantly improved functionality, the DC government still chronically underfunds schools. I would be more than happy if my taxes were raised and allocated reduce class size and provide better specials and wraparound services for those students in need.