Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My middle school was grades 5-8. You could have Hardy be 5-6 and Deal 7-8. Taking the 5th graders out of JKLM would open up classrooms there. The city could have dedicated school busses at points throughout upper NW. Opening up extra spaces at the elementary level also would allow for more OOB spaces there.
Doesn't that just create extra capacity at other elementary schools, which then gets filled by OOB students? If so, that leads to overcrowding at the middle school level.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My middle school was grades 5-8. You could have Hardy be 5-6 and Deal 7-8. Taking the 5th graders out of JKLM would open up classrooms there. The city could have dedicated school busses at points throughout upper NW. Opening up extra spaces at the elementary level also would allow for more OOB spaces there.
Doesn't that just create extra capacity at other elementary schools, which then gets filled by OOB students? If so, that leads to overcrowding at the middle school level.
At Key and stoddert it gets rid of tthe trailers. No increase in oob.
Yes, but it increases OOB at other elementary schools.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My middle school was grades 5-8. You could have Hardy be 5-6 and Deal 7-8. Taking the 5th graders out of JKLM would open up classrooms there. The city could have dedicated school busses at points throughout upper NW. Opening up extra spaces at the elementary level also would allow for more OOB spaces there.
Doesn't that just create extra capacity at other elementary schools, which then gets filled by OOB students? If so, that leads to overcrowding at the middle school level.
At Key and stoddert it gets rid of tthe trailers. No increase in oob.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My middle school was grades 5-8. You could have Hardy be 5-6 and Deal 7-8. Taking the 5th graders out of JKLM would open up classrooms there. The city could have dedicated school busses at points throughout upper NW. Opening up extra spaces at the elementary level also would allow for more OOB spaces there.
Doesn't that just create extra capacity at other elementary schools, which then gets filled by OOB students? If so, that leads to overcrowding at the middle school level.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm not the PP, I was a NP. How the hell can you state that IB scores are better than OOB? It's stupid made up statements as facts that strip away any credibility.
The PARCC scores offer a pretty clear picture. For example, it's not hard to compare the PARCC scores of the Hardy feeders (mostly IB) with the PARCC scores of Hardy students (mostly OOB). You can even follow the same student cohort by looking at successive years of PARCC results. Lots of demographic info is cross-tabulated with the PARCC scores. I'm sure your OOB particular child is scoring near the top of the PARCC levels. I also suspect that most of the OOB students at Hardy are often good students, if only because their families care enough about their education to research and work the lottery for Hardy admission, and put for the effort to get the kids to Hardy each day. But it's pretty obvious that the OOB students at Hardy are on average pulling down the PARCC scores.
FWIW, I'm not the person who posted about Hardy's IB and OOB students. I agree that poster's comments could have been phrased more carefully to avoid possible offense. But I also think that poster clarified her comments after she was called out. Can you just drop it so we can move forward with the discussion?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My middle school was grades 5-8. You could have Hardy be 5-6 and Deal 7-8. Taking the 5th graders out of JKLM would open up classrooms there. The city could have dedicated school busses at points throughout upper NW. Opening up extra spaces at the elementary level also would allow for more OOB spaces there.
What happens for 9-12
Use the academic classrooms at Duke Ellington while the artists-in-triaing during the arts part of their day.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My middle school was grades 5-8. You could have Hardy be 5-6 and Deal 7-8. Taking the 5th graders out of JKLM would open up classrooms there. The city could have dedicated school busses at points throughout upper NW. Opening up extra spaces at the elementary level also would allow for more OOB spaces there.
What happens for 9-12
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Great, more traffic on Wisconsin! No.
Because I am driving 8th grade DC1 to pickup point for private school in MoCo and then DC2 to Sidwell for 6th grade because the now-out Hardy principal has FUBAR'd our neighborhood MS? And then back ont Wisconsin to take DC3 to IB Hardy feeder while I contemplate how to pay a third private school tuition after paying $70K in DC income and property taxes for a neighborhood and home I love but stuck with a school system focused on raising the bottom up but not the middle (and definitely NOT raising the top up).
Wisconsin Ave all the way.
But why would you need 3 tuitions? Your oldest will be ready for Wilson before your youngest starts.
Someone who can afford in bounds Hardy housing, and $70K tuition can choose many other places to live that would involve less driving and good schools. You chose this, not sure why.
Anonymous wrote:My middle school was grades 5-8. You could have Hardy be 5-6 and Deal 7-8. Taking the 5th graders out of JKLM would open up classrooms there. The city could have dedicated school busses at points throughout upper NW. Opening up extra spaces at the elementary level also would allow for more OOB spaces there.
Anonymous wrote:I'm not the PP, I was a NP. How the hell can you state that IB scores are better than OOB? It's stupid made up statements as facts that strip away any credibility.
Anonymous wrote:My middle school was grades 5-8. You could have Hardy be 5-6 and Deal 7-8. Taking the 5th graders out of JKLM would open up classrooms there. The city could have dedicated school busses at points throughout upper NW. Opening up extra spaces at the elementary level also would allow for more OOB spaces there.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yep, as the mom of an OOB Hardy grad, the bolded statement is really offensive. Yeah, if you could just get rid of kids like mine, your school would be sooooo much better. Nice to know what you think of my child.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Never. Gonna. Happen.
-- Hardy IB family who would love it, but seriously why would any IB Deal family or Deal feeder family be up for this...
I seriously don't get the Hardy IB community. You have a school fed exclusively by top performing elementary schools. No dead weight whatsoever and most as hard to get into OOB as Deal feeds. If you just enrolled in boundary you'd have a school superior to Deal with a much more manageable size.
But that means someone's gotta do it first. They gotta keep going to reduce the OOB and thus reduce the brown kids to make it safe for everyone to come on in. You also have a great school in Banneker that no white families look at. DC, neck and neck with Boston for being the most racist liberal city.
Poster of the Never comment. I wasn't throwing shade at Hardy as much as why on earth would the parents of the best well performing school in the city - a majority of whom live close to the school - be willing to disrupt that AND add a commute. Seriously.
For a long time - for a variety of dynamics that rehash a lot of history - many of inflated and diversionary ones are regularly brought up on DCUM - Hardy has had low IB enrollment. For families coming from schools with super high scores and lots of amenities (yes, lots supplemented by the PTA) - there is a chicken and egg issue. Hardy is a good school - but is at a point where they are working through an increasing neighborhood and feeder families along with serving a big population of students from around the city. And helping all students achieve and succeed. We are sending our kids there.
A majority of Deal students do not live close to the school. A chunk, maybe but not over 50%. Beck the school is only 60% IB which includes Shepherd, Bancroft, and Lafayette. It does t help to exaggerate numbers when having these discussions.
That doesn't change the point.
yEs it does. The implication was that the majority of kids walk to school which is not the case. If you're driving from Chevy Chase it won't hurt to drive another 7 minutes especially if you're on the way downtown. Or better yet have your kid take bus all together.
"Much of whom live close to the school" -- never says walk. Murch, Hearst, much of Janney, some of Lafayette can walk or drive within 5-10 mins and have a neighborhood connection to the Wisconsin/Connect Ave corridor.
On a Saturday - no traffic, 19 minutes from Lafayette to Hardy ...
...https://www.google.com/maps/dir/Lafayette+Elementary+School,+Broad+Branch+Road+Northwest,+Washington,+DC/Hardy+Middle+School,+1819+35th+St+NW,+Washington,+DC+20007/@38.940896,-77.1102587,13z/data=!3m1!4b1!4m13!4m12!1m5!1m1!1s0x89b7c9a6072f5dd3:0xd152d586ec440367!2m2!1d-77.0679076!2d38.9664459!1m5!1m1!1s0x89b7b63a1938c26d:0x75d31a331e4aef79!2m2!1d-77.0686541!2d38.9153755
Lafayette to Deal -- 8 minutes https://www.google.com/maps/dir/Lafayette+Elementary+School,+Broad+Branch+Road+Northwest,+Washington,+DC/Deal+Middle+School,+Fort+Drive+Northwest,+Washington,+DC/@38.9593916,-77.078273,15z/data=!3m1!4b1!4m13!4m12!1m5!1m1!1s0x89b7c9a6072f5dd3:0xd152d586ec440367!2m2!1d-77.0679076!2d38.9664459!1m5!1m1!1s0x89b7c9bf36be0f89:0x5df987d325cc8916!2m2!1d-77.075086!2d38.953232
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yep, as the mom of an OOB Hardy grad, the bolded statement is really offensive. Yeah, if you could just get rid of kids like mine, your school would be sooooo much better. Nice to know what you think of my child.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Never. Gonna. Happen.
-- Hardy IB family who would love it, but seriously why would any IB Deal family or Deal feeder family be up for this...
I seriously don't get the Hardy IB community. You have a school fed exclusively by top performing elementary schools. No dead weight whatsoever and most as hard to get into OOB as Deal feeds. If you just enrolled in boundary you'd have a school superior to Deal with a much more manageable size.
But that means someone's gotta do it first. They gotta keep going to reduce the OOB and thus reduce the brown kids to make it safe for everyone to come on in. You also have a great school in Banneker that no white families look at. DC, neck and neck with Boston for being the most racist liberal city.
Poster of the Never comment. I wasn't throwing shade at Hardy as much as why on earth would the parents of the best well performing school in the city - a majority of whom live close to the school - be willing to disrupt that AND add a commute. Seriously.
For a long time - for a variety of dynamics that rehash a lot of history - many of inflated and diversionary ones are regularly brought up on DCUM - Hardy has had low IB enrollment. For families coming from schools with super high scores and lots of amenities (yes, lots supplemented by the PTA) - there is a chicken and egg issue. Hardy is a good school - but is at a point where they are working through an increasing neighborhood and feeder families along with serving a big population of students from around the city. And helping all students achieve and succeed. We are sending our kids there.
A majority of Deal students do not live close to the school. A chunk, maybe but not over 50%. Beck the school is only 60% IB which includes Shepherd, Bancroft, and Lafayette. It does t help to exaggerate numbers when having these discussions.
That doesn't change the point.
yEs it does. The implication was that the majority of kids walk to school which is not the case. If you're driving from Chevy Chase it won't hurt to drive another 7 minutes especially if you're on the way downtown. Or better yet have your kid take bus all together.