Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do you never tire of your race baiting? Parents who want neighborhood schools in a city that kept neighborhood schools aren’t the enemy. If SH was at least 2/3 IB and 2/3 Black I highly doubt that anybody on this thread would be complaining.
If more parents from the neighborhood sent their kids there, it would become a “neighborhood” school.
And ask yourself this: If the school were 80% white and 80% OOB, do you honestly think people on DCUM would be complaining about it?
Yes, and if more of us neighborhood families sent our kids to SH, many of us would wind up pushed out of the city because we'd be without a remotely acceptable high school.
What are we supposed to do after Hobson if our kids don't get into Walls and we can't afford a private? You tell us. Go to Banneker if we're not black? Head to McKinley tech if our kids aren't interested in tech? Head to Ellington if our kids don't like to perform? What? Just not worth the risk to be without a high school.
What is exactly is the problem with sending your child to Banneker? Banneker is one of the highest-performing high schools in DC. Are you telling me that you're unwilling to send your child to Banneker because it's too black for you yet your opposition to Stuart Hobson is totally unrelated to how black it is
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do you never tire of your race baiting? Parents who want neighborhood schools in a city that kept neighborhood schools aren’t the enemy. If SH was at least 2/3 IB and 2/3 Black I highly doubt that anybody on this thread would be complaining.
If more parents from the neighborhood sent their kids there, it would become a “neighborhood” school.
And ask yourself this: If the school were 80% white and 80% OOB, do you honestly think people on DCUM would be complaining about it?
Yes, and if more of us neighborhood families sent our kids to SH, many of us would wind up pushed out of the city because we'd be without a remotely acceptable high school.
What are we supposed to do after Hobson if our kids don't get into Walls and we can't afford a private? You tell us. Go to Banneker if we're not black? Head to McKinley tech if our kids aren't interested in tech? Head to Ellington if our kids don't like to perform? What? Just not worth the risk to be without a high school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is the kind of post I wish Jeff has some way of moderating. It is so obvious that many of the detractors are straight-up racist, and for some reason are trying to encourage other people to also admit that racism is correct.
We have upper income kids at Title 1 elementary (who are thriving) and would absolutely send our kids to SH. We exist. why discourage us?
What I don’t understand is why those of us giving our positive, lived-experience of having kids thrive at SH are dismissed as boosters versus the fears abs derision of those who won’t even consider it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do you never tire of your race baiting? Parents who want neighborhood schools in a city that kept neighborhood schools aren’t the enemy. If SH was at least 2/3 IB and 2/3 Black I highly doubt that anybody on this thread would be complaining.
If more parents from the neighborhood sent their kids there, it would become a “neighborhood” school.
And ask yourself this: If the school were 80% white and 80% OOB, do you honestly think people on DCUM would be complaining about it?
Yes, and if more of us neighborhood families sent our kids to SH, many of us would wind up pushed out of the city because we'd be without a remotely acceptable high school.
What are we supposed to do after Hobson if our kids don't get into Walls and we can't afford a private? You tell us. Go to Banneker if we're not black? Head to McKinley tech if our kids aren't interested in tech? Head to Ellington if our kids don't like to perform? What? Just not worth the risk to be without a high school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do you never tire of your race baiting? Parents who want neighborhood schools in a city that kept neighborhood schools aren’t the enemy. If SH was at least 2/3 IB and 2/3 Black I highly doubt that anybody on this thread would be complaining.
If more parents from the neighborhood sent their kids there, it would become a “neighborhood” school.
And ask yourself this: If the school were 80% white and 80% OOB, do you honestly think people on DCUM would be complaining about it?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is the kind of post I wish Jeff has some way of moderating. It is so obvious that many of the detractors are straight-up racist, and for some reason are trying to encourage other people to also admit that racism is correct.
We have upper income kids at Title 1 elementary (who are thriving) and would absolutely send our kids to SH. We exist. why discourage us?
What I don’t understand is why those of us giving our positive, lived-experience of having kids thrive at SH are dismissed as boosters versus the fears abs derision of those who won’t even consider it.
+1 - as pp dismissed several pages back for simply stating where my kid's math and ELA stand. This 8th grade advanced math completed Geometry and Algebra 1 this year. Some Basis kids may have pushed farther ahead but we're fine with starting Algebra 2 for 9th in selective HS
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is the kind of post I wish Jeff has some way of moderating. It is so obvious that many of the detractors are straight-up racist, and for some reason are trying to encourage other people to also admit that racism is correct.
We have upper income kids at Title 1 elementary (who are thriving) and would absolutely send our kids to SH. We exist. why discourage us?
What I don’t understand is why those of us giving our positive, lived-experience of having kids thrive at SH are dismissed as boosters versus the fears abs derision of those who won’t even consider it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can folks comment on the new Principal, theater and art program?
We’re a happy Basis family I-B for SH. But I don’t think Basis will be a good fit for my youngest child who’s really into art.
Students can take art or drama as an elective during the school day. If they want to be involved in productions, there were two musicals a year in the pre-covid times and work for that can be before or after school depending on how close it is to production time. Art students help make parts of the sets and costumes as well.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do you never tire of your race baiting? Parents who want neighborhood schools in a city that kept neighborhood schools aren’t the enemy. If SH was at least 2/3 IB and 2/3 Black I highly doubt that anybody on this thread would be complaining.
If more parents from the neighborhood sent their kids there, it would become a “neighborhood” school.
And ask yourself this: If the school were 80% white and 80% OOB, do you honestly think people on DCUM would be complaining about it?
Anonymous wrote:This is the kind of post I wish Jeff has some way of moderating. It is so obvious that many of the detractors are straight-up racist, and for some reason are trying to encourage other people to also admit that racism is correct.
We have upper income kids at Title 1 elementary (who are thriving) and would absolutely send our kids to SH. We exist. why discourage us?
Anonymous wrote:Can folks comment on the new Principal, theater and art program?
We’re a happy Basis family I-B for SH. But I don’t think Basis will be a good fit for my youngest child who’s really into art.
Anonymous wrote:Do you never tire of your race baiting? Parents who want neighborhood schools in a city that kept neighborhood schools aren’t the enemy. If SH was at least 2/3 IB and 2/3 Black I highly doubt that anybody on this thread would be complaining.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Thank goodness for the charter middle schools. The conversation about MS and HS on the Hill has become so loaded that it’s no longer worth having. If you’re fine with Hobson don’t expect the rest of us to appreciate that. We’re not racist, we’re just angry that DCPS doesn’t care about serving most neighbors at what is supposed to be a neighborhood school. The test scores are 29 years behind the demographics of the catchment area.
This. Calling everyone racist because they want the overwhelming majority of kids to be at least on grade level. That’s not even asking for much when the kids who are inbound typically are.
These people use the race card to attack people who question a school’s poor performance. They don’t get it that it just turns away even more the families that they want.