Ed. Note: Below are graphs created by two DCPS parents, Betsy Wolf and Amber Gove, that tell a story of inequitable funding of DCPS schools along socioeconomic lines. This is in line with what many public witnesses testified about during the recent DCPS budget hearing on March 28, citing concerns with inadequate staffing and cutbacks … Continue reading Inequitable Funding In DCPS (Yes, It Is As Bad As You Feared)
Facilities & Cross Sector Task Force Meetings
The deputy mayor for education's office has been busy, setting upcoming meetings for the master facilities plan (MFP) as well as cross sector task force recommendations. More information on the MFP is here. The master facilities plan is late in coming, but is the basis for future building needs for DC's public school students. (For … Continue reading Facilities & Cross Sector Task Force Meetings
Editorial: Mayoral Control Has Failed DCPS
[The following is a guest editorial by public school advocate Peter MacPherson] During much of human history, state power has resided with just a few people. Sometimes that power was applied fairly, for the common good--though many self-appointed leaders, or those receiving their command as a birthright, have applied power capriciously, to the benefit of … Continue reading Editorial: Mayoral Control Has Failed DCPS
Update: Budget & Other Ed. Hearings
Back in January, when we were young and easy and ran in our heedless ways believing that neither chancellor nor deputy mayor for education would ever deceive us, school advocates petitioned council education committee chair David Grosso to change the budget hearing dates for DCPS and the charter board so that they would not occur … Continue reading Update: Budget & Other Ed. Hearings
What They Said: Public Education Roundtable
The public roundtable on school governance and oversight this past Monday (March 19) was an important, if belated, milestone. In the wake of DC public school scandals (plural!), and the council’s inability to get the mayor to testify about them, the education committee of the city council decided to hear ideas from the public concerning … Continue reading What They Said: Public Education Roundtable
It’s An Election Year! Candidate Forum On Education 3/17 & Political Scorecard
Tomorrow, Saturday March 17, the Washington Teachers' Union (WTU) is holding a candidate forum starting at 10:30 am in room 150 at McKinley Tech high school (151 T St. NE). Sign up is here, with an information sheet here. Candidates are expected to speak about issues surrounding public education in DC. Council candidates from wards … Continue reading It’s An Election Year! Candidate Forum On Education 3/17 & Political Scorecard
Educating The Adults In The (DC) Room
Whether we adults agree with our public school governance, our children are moving on. Every day, week, month, and year, our children show up to hundreds of publicly funded schools in DC with the democratic expectation that there will be trained teachers to teach them; decent desks for them to sit at; accurate and timely … Continue reading Educating The Adults In The (DC) Room
Hearing We Go Again: Rat Terrier Edition
Instead of our mayor testifying before our city council about all the stuff happening of late in our public schools (you know, because she's in control of our schools and therefore responsible or something), YOU are on the hot seat! City council education committee chair David Grosso has scheduled a roundtable for the public next … Continue reading Hearing We Go Again: Rat Terrier Edition
Fraud–Or Why We Need An Independent School Data Agency
Despite council education committee chair David Grosso asking DCPS personnel at the March 1 DCPS performance oversight hearing (find the hearing recording here; Grosso comments start at minute 30) about the existence of residency fraud, and being reassured that it is not common, anectodal evidence suggests that residency fraud and waitlist jumping have occurred regularly in our … Continue reading Fraud–Or Why We Need An Independent School Data Agency
“This Is Not A Boat Accident”
[Herein follows a guest blog entry by school advocate Peter MacPherson] Actor Richard Dreyfuss made that statement in the title above in the 1975 film Jaws, while the character he portrayed examined the mangled torso of a young woman who, we come to learn, has been devoured by a great white shark. The town’s sheriff … Continue reading “This Is Not A Boat Accident”