Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's not that Ward 3 parents purchased expensive houses and thus should be entitled to their neighborhood schools. Many, many of us have devoted blood, sweat and tears over recent years to improving these neighborhood schools. And that's why the possibility of losing access to them (either through shifting boundaries at ES or citywide lotteries in older grades) is so unpalatable. Ward 3 parents have done the hard work of building community. We get it. And we do support other wards in their efforts to improve their neighborhood schools.
Just get over it. You have the privilege of living in the District of Columbia, life changes, and majority rules. To the victors go the spoils. Just pay up and shut up and get out of the way. ONE CITY, baby!
Poor dear. This is a petty and small rebuke to a reasonable assertion. But more importantly, it's naive. You can't tell ward 3 families to "put up or shut up." Take a look at DC"s annual budget. There are charts in there about about the tax base and where if is. Your comment shows a sad resentment: folks touting "nod city above all else" will have to set that kind of animosity aside to be effective.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's not that Ward 3 parents purchased expensive houses and thus should be entitled to their neighborhood schools. Many, many of us have devoted blood, sweat and tears over recent years to improving these neighborhood schools. And that's why the possibility of losing access to them (either through shifting boundaries at ES or citywide lotteries in older grades) is so unpalatable. Ward 3 parents have done the hard work of building community. We get it. And we do support other wards in their efforts to improve their neighborhood schools.
Just get over it. You have the privilege of living in the District of Columbia, life changes, and majority rules. To the victors go the spoils. Just pay up and shut up and get out of the way. ONE CITY, baby!
Anonymous wrote:It's not that Ward 3 parents purchased expensive houses and thus should be entitled to their neighborhood schools. Many, many of us have devoted blood, sweat and tears over recent years to improving these neighborhood schools. And that's why the possibility of losing access to them (either through shifting boundaries at ES or citywide lotteries in older grades) is so unpalatable. Ward 3 parents have done the hard work of building community. We get it. And we do support other wards in their efforts to improve their neighborhood schools.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's not that Ward 3 parents purchased expensive houses and thus should be entitled to their neighborhood schools. Many, many of us have devoted blood, sweat and tears over recent years to improving these neighborhood schools. And that's why the possibility of losing access to them (either through shifting boundaries at ES or citywide lotteries in older grades) is so unpalatable. Ward 3 parents have done the hard work of building community. We get it. And we do support other wards in their efforts to improve their neighborhood schools.
+1 I don't get the mentality why once your schools have improved- you should no longer be able to attend them. I've been a Ward 3 parent for many, many years and the schools have come a long way. There is no comparison now to where they were 10 years ago. Parents, myself included, have worked tirelessly to improve them and get parents to keep their kids in DCPS. Why should that be undone? I don''t have a problem setting aside a % of the school for FARMS or OOB or whatever they decide, but it should not preempt my child from attending the school.
Anonymous wrote:It's not that Ward 3 parents purchased expensive houses and thus should be entitled to their neighborhood schools. Many, many of us have devoted blood, sweat and tears over recent years to improving these neighborhood schools. And that's why the possibility of losing access to them (either through shifting boundaries at ES or citywide lotteries in older grades) is so unpalatable. Ward 3 parents have done the hard work of building community. We get it. And we do support other wards in their efforts to improve their neighborhood schools.
+1 I don't get the mentality why once your schools have improved- you should no longer be able to attend them. I've been a Ward 3 parent for many, many years and the schools have come a long way. There is no comparison now to where they were 10 years ago. Parents, myself included, have worked tirelessly to improve them and get parents to keep their kids in DCPS. Why should that be undone? I don''t have a problem setting aside a % of the school for FARMS or OOB or whatever they decide, but it should not preempt my child from attending the school.
Anonymous wrote:It's not that Ward 3 parents purchased expensive houses and thus should be entitled to their neighborhood schools. Many, many of us have devoted blood, sweat and tears over recent years to improving these neighborhood schools. And that's why the possibility of losing access to them (either through shifting boundaries at ES or citywide lotteries in older grades) is so unpalatable. Ward 3 parents have done the hard work of building community. We get it. And we do support other wards in their efforts to improve their neighborhood schools.
+1 we are all parents and all in this together.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Nobody will - which is why property values will go down. Nobody will buy a house knowin there is a real chance that there kid won't be able to attend the good local school. DCPS will lose too - people leave and take their tax dollars with them. Houses in Bethesda will shoot up in value.
I don't agree with this. If you look at the overall numbers, most white children in DC attend private.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The Ward 3 parents on here aren't doing themselves any favors. I was sympathetic to their concerns because they have the most to lose. But it doesn't take hipster glasses to see that very few posters from Ward 3 see themselves as part of a collective system and they clearly dislike other parents and kids outside their ward, either because of their choices or circumstances. Studies show allotting 20% of seats to low-income kids helps those kids, but doesn't hurt the other 80%. That's not a tipping point, so why not help those needy kids?
As this public debate continues, don't expect the other 7 wards to care about your concerns when you show such disregard for theirs.
sounds like you're looking for an excuse to disregard ward 3 parents.
I bet there's nothing in those studies that show that moving kids away from their good neighborhood schools helps them in any way -- or that such a system would even work. It wouldn't be long before families moved out of the neighborhood that was using their kids for this experiment. Besides who says it would be the needy kids who gets the spots-- it could just as easily be high SES kids from hipster neighborhoods who won the lottery.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The Ward 3 parents on here aren't doing themselves any favors. I was sympathetic to their concerns because they have the most to lose. But it doesn't take hipster glasses to see that very few posters from Ward 3 see themselves as part of a collective system and they clearly dislike other parents and kids outside their ward, either because of their choices or circumstances. Studies show allotting 20% of seats to low-income kids helps those kids, but doesn't hurt the other 80%. That's not a tipping point, so why not help those needy kids?
As this public debate continues, don't expect the other 7 wards to care about your concerns when you show such disregard for theirs.
sounds like you're looking for an excuse to disregard ward 3 parents.
I bet there's nothing in those studies that show that moving kids away from their good neighborhood schools helps them in any way -- or that such a system would even work. It wouldn't be long before families moved out of the neighborhood that was using their kids for this experiment. Besides who says it would be the needy kids who gets the spots-- it could just as easily be high SES kids from hipster neighborhoods who won the lottery.
Anonymous wrote:The Ward 3 parents on here aren't doing themselves any favors. I was sympathetic to their concerns because they have the most to lose. But it doesn't take hipster glasses to see that very few posters from Ward 3 see themselves as part of a collective system and they clearly dislike other parents and kids outside their ward, either because of their choices or circumstances. Studies show allotting 20% of seats to low-income kids helps those kids, but doesn't hurt the other 80%. That's not a tipping point, so why not help those needy kids?
As this public debate continues, don't expect the other 7 wards to care about your concerns when you show such disregard for theirs.