Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:YY families didn't find out about the Taylor St. campus until the deal was done.
Rumors flew for years. Parents were angry and wanted more information than the school could give. Some families left. Ultimately, the facility acquisition happened. Most families stayed and many more new families applied.
(All of this was just a precursor to the DCI drama.)
Parents always want to know everything - that's natural. Charter schools in the acquisition stage need to hold back - that's sensible. These are competing desires - that's unavoidable.
My family was in a position to be flexible; hence my sanguine take. We had options and a few years to wait it out. If you're not able to be flexible, then maybe a situation that inherently demands flexibility isn't for you. Nobody but you knows that. Alas, your tight spot doesn't alter the larger picture. Getting irate over a strategic situation that's beyond the school's control is a waste of energy: the school can't do anything differently and now you're just angry.
If you need more certainty and security, then you can find that in the suburbs.
This is wise advice.
My kids' needs will always come before the needs of the school. That seems to be the suggestion here- yank your kids from the school or wake them up extra early and Ferry them across town. It's more important that the school have its needs met before those of my kids. That's not okay.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:YY families didn't find out about the Taylor St. campus until the deal was done.
Rumors flew for years. Parents were angry and wanted more information than the school could give. Some families left. Ultimately, the facility acquisition happened. Most families stayed and many more new families applied.
(All of this was just a precursor to the DCI drama.)
Parents always want to know everything - that's natural. Charter schools in the acquisition stage need to hold back - that's sensible. These are competing desires - that's unavoidable.
My family was in a position to be flexible; hence my sanguine take. We had options and a few years to wait it out. If you're not able to be flexible, then maybe a situation that inherently demands flexibility isn't for you. Nobody but you knows that. Alas, your tight spot doesn't alter the larger picture. Getting irate over a strategic situation that's beyond the school's control is a waste of energy: the school can't do anything differently and now you're just angry.
If you need more certainty and security, then you can find that in the suburbs.
This is wise advice.
My kids' needs will always come before the needs of the school. That seems to be the suggestion here- yank your kids from the school or wake them up extra early and Ferry them across town. It's more important that the school have its needs met before those of my kids. That's not okay.
I don't get that. It's that there is going to be uncertainty for most charters -- and if you can't tolerate it, then you need to figure out something else. It's not a neighborhood school that will always be there. They are just different beasts.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:YY families didn't find out about the Taylor St. campus until the deal was done.
Rumors flew for years. Parents were angry and wanted more information than the school could give. Some families left. Ultimately, the facility acquisition happened. Most families stayed and many more new families applied.
(All of this was just a precursor to the DCI drama.)
Parents always want to know everything - that's natural. Charter schools in the acquisition stage need to hold back - that's sensible. These are competing desires - that's unavoidable.
My family was in a position to be flexible; hence my sanguine take. We had options and a few years to wait it out. If you're not able to be flexible, then maybe a situation that inherently demands flexibility isn't for you. Nobody but you knows that. Alas, your tight spot doesn't alter the larger picture. Getting irate over a strategic situation that's beyond the school's control is a waste of energy: the school can't do anything differently and now you're just angry.
If you need more certainty and security, then you can find that in the suburbs.
This is wise advice.
My kids' needs will always come before the needs of the school. That seems to be the suggestion here- yank your kids from the school or wake them up extra early and Ferry them across town. It's more important that the school have its needs met before those of my kids. That's not okay.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:YY families didn't find out about the Taylor St. campus until the deal was done.
Rumors flew for years. Parents were angry and wanted more information than the school could give. Some families left. Ultimately, the facility acquisition happened. Most families stayed and many more new families applied.
(All of this was just a precursor to the DCI drama.)
Parents always want to know everything - that's natural. Charter schools in the acquisition stage need to hold back - that's sensible. These are competing desires - that's unavoidable.
My family was in a position to be flexible; hence my sanguine take. We had options and a few years to wait it out. If you're not able to be flexible, then maybe a situation that inherently demands flexibility isn't for you. Nobody but you knows that. Alas, your tight spot doesn't alter the larger picture. Getting irate over a strategic situation that's beyond the school's control is a waste of energy: the school can't do anything differently and now you're just angry.
If you need more certainty and security, then you can find that in the suburbs.
This is wise advice.
Anonymous wrote:YY families didn't find out about the Taylor St. campus until the deal was done.
Rumors flew for years. Parents were angry and wanted more information than the school could give. Some families left. Ultimately, the facility acquisition happened. Most families stayed and many more new families applied.
(All of this was just a precursor to the DCI drama.)
Parents always want to know everything - that's natural. Charter schools in the acquisition stage need to hold back - that's sensible. These are competing desires - that's unavoidable.
My family was in a position to be flexible; hence my sanguine take. We had options and a few years to wait it out. If you're not able to be flexible, then maybe a situation that inherently demands flexibility isn't for you. Nobody but you knows that. Alas, your tight spot doesn't alter the larger picture. Getting irate over a strategic situation that's beyond the school's control is a waste of energy: the school can't do anything differently and now you're just angry.
If you need more certainty and security, then you can find that in the suburbs.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As has been clearly explained, there are many good reasons to not share this information yet. In fact, it would be stupid to do so for those exact reasons.
That people are in a huff over this shows that some of the poor communication is more a case of parent entitlement.
A years lead is insufficient time. People bought and sold houses based on the location of lamb. Any mention of school sponsored buses is treated like evidence of treason. It's exhausting what parents are demanded to do on a regular basis. BreakthRough Montessori let's parents drop off students at the curb instead of parking in a sketchy neighborhood and walking them inside. Yu Ying and Mundo verde sponsor buses (Mundo even subsidizes them!). Lamb expects parents to arrive at work late or preferably, not work at all. Now we can't be trusted to know (1) that we are moving and (2) that the move is permanent and far away from the current schools. Straight up RIDICULOUS.
Sketchy?? Lol I had no problem parking blocks away from Bridges at that location. No more likely to have car broken into than Dupont etc. And MV does not have buses, it has a bus that is really, really expensive. I'm sure Lamb could do the same. MV does not subsidize, they charge more for huger income to pay Forbes lower income. If you pay for bus, before and aftercare, you can easily be close to $1k a month. It's absurd!! I think it's about the same to ride the MV bus as it is to Uber from Mt Pleasant to campus. It's laughable.
Anonymous wrote:Also, anyone who buys a house based on charter school location gets to be called a republican forever.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here-- I heard this from two different people who work at the school, but I'd love if it weren't true. PP, have you heard differently?
Two different people who work at the school have said this? I am a LAMB parent and have only heard them say in the past that they would like to consolidate. They recently sent an email to parents detailing a plan for next school year that included plans for all three campuses (South Dakota, Missouri, Walter Reed). Seems odd there would be a simultaneous plan to consolidate after just sending out that email.....
I toured LAMB earlier this year and I understood that the mid-term plan was to consolidate LAMB at the Walter Reed Campus.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As has been clearly explained, there are many good reasons to not share this information yet. In fact, it would be stupid to do so for those exact reasons.
That people are in a huff over this shows that some of the poor communication is more a case of parent entitlement.
A years lead is insufficient time. People bought and sold houses based on the location of lamb. Any mention of school sponsored buses is treated like evidence of treason. It's exhausting what parents are demanded to do on a regular basis. BreakthRough Montessori let's parents drop off students at the curb instead of parking in a sketchy neighborhood and walking them inside. Yu Ying and Mundo verde sponsor buses (Mundo even subsidizes them!). Lamb expects parents to arrive at work late or preferably, not work at all. Now we can't be trusted to know (1) that we are moving and (2) that the move is permanent and far away from the current schools. Straight up RIDICULOUS.
Not a LAMB parent, but you just sound straight-up entitled. I don't know how you went about buying your house, but I didn't begin the process for buying mine by telling every potential seller "Hey! I'm desperate to buy! Big time! Please don't allow my publicized and obvious desperation to affect your asking price, okay?!"
From what can be gleaned of the publicly available information, the school has always wanted one singular campus. They may not get what they want, but that they're working towards it and have an eye to the future isn't hidden from view. Obviously their board is going to be privy to information that parents don't have. Hello?! If the board doesn't have the information then who is ultimately responsible for the school? The PTA?
You don't seem to understand how completely unrealistic you come across.