Wednesday 22 January 2014

Re: [WardFive] Article: Dunbar High autonomy proposal stirs debate in D.C.

Richard

There is a slight problem with your response.  Henderson has nothing to do with this proposal as it was being pitched to her. Secondly she isn't pushing the charter school movement.  That movement was around when she was a student at Georgetown.  Much like the concept of specialized schools was as well. For some reason we seem to have forgotten the history of our city.

On Jan 22, 2014 3:54 PM, "Richard Patterson" <rlpat8535@gmail.com> wrote:
The discussion of making Dunbar a "selective" school is reflective of
the poor quality of leadership at the top of DCPS and the top of this
city. Is this the plan for underperforming students in the public high
schools of D.C.?  We don't need Kaya Henderson if this is the best she
has to offer. Those residents of DC who wish for the good old days at
Dunbar - a return of its prestige as a producer of superstar
graduates- coupled with the "new arrivals" who want to remake the
District of Columbia in their vision, are not willing or could care
less about demanding that DCPS and Vincent Gray produce a plan for
those students who will be pushed into schools that cannot meet their
needs.  Kaya Henderson and Vincent Gray are overseeing a remaking of
DCPS in the form of charter and specialty schools that have no place
for poor students. No visionaries, these two. God help the kids.

On 1/21/14, Ward Five Council on Education <ward5coe@gmail.com> wrote:
> http://www.washingtonpost.com/local/education/dunbar-high-school-autonomy-proposal-stirs-debate-in-dc/2014/01/18/63c4c442-7fad-11e3-93c1-0e888170b723_story.html
>
> Dunbar High autonomy proposal stirs debate in D.C.
>
> Michael S. Williamson/The Washington Post - Large metal letters spelling out
> the school's name are seen at the entrance of Dunbar High School.
> 12
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> By Emma Brown, Published: January 18 E-mail the writer
> A proposal to improve Dunbar High School by converting it to an autonomous
> and selective school has generated widespread debate among teachers,
> students, alumni and community members. It's a debate not only about the
> future of Dunbar, one of the District's most storied public schools, but
> also about the city's ability to serve all students.
>
> The push for change, which a small group of alumni and parents quietly
> developed over the past several months, would give Dunbar more freedom to
> make decisions about whom it hires, how it spends its money and how it
> designs its academic offerings.
>
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>
> But the proposal, first reported last week in The Washington Post, would
> also transform a neighborhood school that is legally obligated to take all
> comers into an application-only institution that could choose its students.
> Such an arrangement most likely would give Dunbar, in the 100 block of N
> Street NW, the ability to choose not to serve the neediest neighborhood
> children.
>
> It's an idea that could jump-start a transformation of Dunbar, which was
> once known for educating the District's elite black students and is now one
> of the city's worst-performing schools.
>
> But critics of the proposal say it would be a false transformation, built on
> the rejection of students who come to class with profound challenges —
> including poor reading ability, deficient math skills and difficult home
> lives — that need to be addressed.
>
> "I would just hope that whatever solution they come up with, it's something
> that takes into account every single student in the system and takes care of
> every kid in the school," said Kat Calvin, who runs a nonprofit organization
> that works with Dunbar's female students. "There's always this temptation to
> write off certain children and say it's too late for them. That's never
> true."
>
> A Dunbar sophomore, concerned about what a major change might bring, said,
> "What should be the goal is trying to fix the problems that are here and
> ensuring that students are getting what they need."
>
> The alumni and parents who developed the proposal planned to pitch it to
> D.C. Schools Chancellor Kaya Henderson as a way to restore Dunbar's
> reputation for academic achievement, according to interviews and talking
> points obtained by The Post.
>
> Henderson declined to comment, as did two of Dunbar's most influential
> living graduates, D.C. Mayor Vincent C. Gray (D) and Del. Eleanor Holmes
> Norton (D). Former school board member Carrie Thornhill — a confidante of
> Gray's and a 1961 Dunbar graduate who has been working on the proposal —
> also declined to comment. Principal Stephen Jackson did not respond to
> requests for comment.
>
> Alison Stewart, who interviewed many alumni and school leaders for her 2013
> book about Dunbar, "First Class," said she sensed that many graduates felt
> sad, and sometimes frustrated, that the school no longer offers students the
> kind of experience it once did.
>
> One graduate "expressed dismay that students who really wanted to learn and
> were there to learn had to do so in a sometimes disruptive environment,"
> Stewart wrote in an e-mail. She also said Dunbar, given its history, seems a
> natural choice to help meet the demand for more rigorous schools. "It is
> wise for administrators to take a look at the one-size-fits-all high school
> model, given there are . . . so many students in the system at so many
> different levels."
>
> The District has six selective high schools that enroll almost 4,000
> students. Charter high schools enroll 6,400 students, and neighborhood high
> schools — many of which parents consider options of last resort — have about
> 7,000.
>
> Some people worry that creating another selective high school at Dunbar
> would further concentrate the neediest students in the neighborhood high
> schools that remain.
>
> Cardozo Education Campus, the neighborhood high school closest to Dunbar,
> has a large number of special education students (at least a third of its
> enrollment) and students learning English as a second language (at least a
> quarter). Many students arrive years behind grade level, and fewer than four
> in 10 graduate on time. What would happen to Cardozo if it was asked to take
> on Dunbar's most difficult students?
>
> "We already have selective schools," said a Dunbar employee who spoke on the
> condition of anonymity because of fears of retribution. "Adding another just
> makes the others vulnerable. The other schools automatically become
> permanent underclass hubs."
>
> Faith Hubbard, president of the Ward Five Council on Education, said she
> supports Dunbar's push for more flexibility on budget matters, curriculum
> and staffing. But she, too, expressed concern about requiring students to
> apply in order to enroll.
>
> "Wouldn't it be even more a story of victory if you were able to do this
> with the students that you have?" she said.
>
> Hubbard suggested that it might make sense to start an application-only
> program at Dunbar while reserving seats to accommodate neighborhood
> children. "If there were a particular program or two that was selective at
> the school, then that would be great," she said, "because you could have a
> variety of kids learning together and encouraging each other to learn."
>
> Johnathon Carrington, Dunbar's 2013 valedictorian, said he would like to see
> standards set for admission to the school. Students who skip class,
> misbehave and refuse to participate make it difficult to learn, he said. But
> he said admission standards, at least at first, should be based largely on
> students' efforts, on their willingness to try.
>
> "They should set the bar where it's pretty reasonable for the students so
> they can apply themselves, and then, as years go, they should raise the
> expectations," said Carrington, a freshman at Georgetown University who
> remarked that he often wonders how he got into such a prestigious
> university.
>
>
> "I feel as though all the standards that Georgetown has, I didn't meet all
> of them," he said. "The future students of Dunbar — I don't want them to
> feel that way. I want them to feel: 'I worked hard in high school. I met all
> of the standards. I got into a good college and feel as though I should be
> there.' "
>
> Questions about Dunbar's future are sometimes difficult to separate from the
> future of the Truxton Circle neighborhood, which — like much of the city —
> has gentrified quickly in recent years, becoming noticeably whiter, younger
> and wealthier.
>
> Students are "already living in a city that is changing under their feet,"
> said a member of the Dunbar community, who spoke on the condition of
> anonymity to protect relationships at the school and who said Dunbar's new,
> $122 million building has intensified the feeling among many students that
> they don't belong.
>
> "They've lived in the city longer than most of us, and it's becoming a whole
> new place, a place that's pretty loudly saying, 'This is not for you,' " the
> Dunbar community member said. "And now they're here in this school that
> seems like it's for students that are better than they are. . . . And now
> all of these people are saying, 'Yeah, we do want students who are better
> than you.' "
>
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