Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Lots of pom-poms on this thread. I can't imagine enrolling my rising 1st-grader in any school mentioned above.
It's easy to wax optimistic when your DC is enrolling for PS3. After paying for daycare, it seems like a gift.
Much the same for PK4, although by then you have a sense of opportunities greater than simply "free."
K is where the rubber meets the road. By now, you have friends who are enrolled in very desirable programs. They may be HRCS (the Highly Regarded Charter shortlist: Bridges, Cap City, Creative Minds, DC Bilingual, DC Prep, EL Haynes, Inspired Teaching, LAMB, Mundo Verde, Two Rivers, Stokes, Yu Ying) or OOB JKLM, or private.
By 1st, if you didn't have an exit strategy, you need Xanax. Better prepared families have been peeling off for years. And those who didn't get lucky in the lottery, or paid up to go private, have decamped for FFX and MoCo.
Meanwhile DCPS's improvement strategy has offered extended school days... only to be shot down by the WTU. Why? Because when it comes to improving the education of children in DCPS? Children don't pay Union dues! So they (and their families) can go to... someplace hot. Of course, the WTU does insist that they get to keep their massive raise package.
Just because they win, doesn't mean that the taxpayer does.
Please don't feed this troll!
Actually, I have witnessed all the supposed "troll" reports. I was inbounds for Takoma, and students attended several charters & OOB schools looking for a fit with a commute we can live with. Didn't find it. Enrolled yesterday in Mont Co, Maryland tags on the car today, moving van later this week.
What did not work? Are you moving up county or down county in Montgomery county? I have to wonder how long till Montgomery county has the similar issues as DC. Ubber successful upper county, struggling largely segregated down county.
Anonymous wrote:Mont Co, new resident back. Moving to small apartment in BCC cluster for Westland MS.
What didn't work for us, in one way or another in DC:
One highly regarded charter with child in "bleeding/leading edge"
Another highly regarded charter in expansion year with class out of control
One OOB school with high principal turnover (many years ago, in early Rhee days)
One OOB MS school with only adequate academics
The best public school years my older child had were at an OOB elementary with a miserable commute. The best public school years my younger child had were at the charter where older was "bleeding" edge, and younger was relatively content (and well educated).
The thing we never tried was Takoma EC, in bounds, and I would never ever send a child to Coolidge, the other in bounds school. I see a major problem with both Roosevelt and Coolidge underenrolled, and until one is closed (preferably Coolidge now that Roosevelt has been renovated), there will not be sufficient neighborhood impetus to improve the high school. There has been a real loss in the boundary proposal that all the education campuses are left intact, with the promise of a someday "new north MS".
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Lots of pom-poms on this thread. I can't imagine enrolling my rising 1st-grader in any school mentioned above.
It's easy to wax optimistic when your DC is enrolling for PS3. After paying for daycare, it seems like a gift.
Much the same for PK4, although by then you have a sense of opportunities greater than simply "free."
K is where the rubber meets the road. By now, you have friends who are enrolled in very desirable programs. They may be HRCS (the Highly Regarded Charter shortlist: Bridges, Cap City, Creative Minds, DC Bilingual, DC Prep, EL Haynes, Inspired Teaching, LAMB, Mundo Verde, Two Rivers, Stokes, Yu Ying) or OOB JKLM, or private.
By 1st, if you didn't have an exit strategy, you need Xanax. Better prepared families have been peeling off for years. And those who didn't get lucky in the lottery, or paid up to go private, have decamped for FFX and MoCo.
Meanwhile DCPS's improvement strategy has offered extended school days... only to be shot down by the WTU. Why? Because when it comes to improving the education of children in DCPS? Children don't pay Union dues! So they (and their families) can go to... someplace hot. Of course, the WTU does insist that they get to keep their massive raise package.
Just because they win, doesn't mean that the taxpayer does.
Please don't feed this troll!
Actually, I have witnessed all the supposed "troll" reports. I was inbounds for Takoma, and students attended several charters & OOB schools looking for a fit with a commute we can live with. Didn't find it. Enrolled yesterday in Mont Co, Maryland tags on the car today, moving van later this week.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Lots of pom-poms on this thread. I can't imagine enrolling my rising 1st-grader in any school mentioned above.
It's easy to wax optimistic when your DC is enrolling for PS3. After paying for daycare, it seems like a gift.
Much the same for PK4, although by then you have a sense of opportunities greater than simply "free."
K is where the rubber meets the road. By now, you have friends who are enrolled in very desirable programs. They may be HRCS (the Highly Regarded Charter shortlist: Bridges, Cap City, Creative Minds, DC Bilingual, DC Prep, EL Haynes, Inspired Teaching, LAMB, Mundo Verde, Two Rivers, Stokes, Yu Ying) or OOB JKLM, or private.
By 1st, if you didn't have an exit strategy, you need Xanax. Better prepared families have been peeling off for years. And those who didn't get lucky in the lottery, or paid up to go private, have decamped for FFX and MoCo.
Meanwhile DCPS's improvement strategy has offered extended school days... only to be shot down by the WTU. Why? Because when it comes to improving the education of children in DCPS? Children don't pay Union dues! So they (and their families) can go to... someplace hot. Of course, the WTU does insist that they get to keep their massive raise package.
Just because they win, doesn't mean that the taxpayer does.
Please don't feed this troll!
Anonymous wrote:^^ very true. To say that only the most dedicated parents sent their kids to the highly sought after charters completely ignores the fact that hundreds every year can't get into those schools. Where are all those kids going? Certainly not all of them are moving to the burbs or going to private. Yes, they are going to their neighborhood schools.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Lots of pom-poms on this thread. I can't imagine enrolling my rising 1st-grader in any school mentioned above.
It's easy to wax optimistic when your DC is enrolling for PS3. After paying for daycare, it seems like a gift.
Much the same for PK4, although by then you have a sense of opportunities greater than simply "free."
K is where the rubber meets the road. By now, you have friends who are enrolled in very desirable programs. They may be HRCS (the Highly Regarded Charter shortlist: Bridges, Cap City, Creative Minds, DC Bilingual, DC Prep, EL Haynes, Inspired Teaching, LAMB, Mundo Verde, Two Rivers, Stokes, Yu Ying) or OOB JKLM, or private.
By 1st, if you didn't have an exit strategy, you need Xanax. Better prepared families have been peeling off for years. And those who didn't get lucky in the lottery, or paid up to go private, have decamped for FFX and MoCo.
Meanwhile DCPS's improvement strategy has offered extended school days... only to be shot down by the WTU. Why? Because when it comes to improving the education of children in DCPS? Children don't pay Union dues! So they (and their families) can go to... someplace hot. Of course, the WTU does insist that they get to keep their massive raise package.
Just because they win, doesn't mean that the taxpayer does.
Please don't feed this troll!
Anonymous wrote:Lots of pom-poms on this thread. I can't imagine enrolling my rising 1st-grader in any school mentioned above.
It's easy to wax optimistic when your DC is enrolling for PS3. After paying for daycare, it seems like a gift.
Much the same for PK4, although by then you have a sense of opportunities greater than simply "free."
K is where the rubber meets the road. By now, you have friends who are enrolled in very desirable programs. They may be HRCS (the Highly Regarded Charter shortlist: Bridges, Cap City, Creative Minds, DC Bilingual, DC Prep, EL Haynes, Inspired Teaching, LAMB, Mundo Verde, Two Rivers, Stokes, Yu Ying) or OOB JKLM, or private.
By 1st, if you didn't have an exit strategy, you need Xanax. Better prepared families have been peeling off for years. And those who didn't get lucky in the lottery, or paid up to go private, have decamped for FFX and MoCo.
Meanwhile DCPS's improvement strategy has offered extended school days... only to be shot down by the WTU. Why? Because when it comes to improving the education of children in DCPS? Children don't pay Union dues! So they (and their families) can go to... someplace hot. Of course, the WTU does insist that they get to keep their massive raise package.
Just because they win, doesn't mean that the taxpayer does.