I mean, to be fair, having children in the school is not a pre-requisite
for joining school committee.   Adam Hogue has run, been elected, and
faithfully served on the committee for several years and has not had
children in the school yet (I assume he has a high tolerance for pain).
I’m not sure it’s appropriate to imply, without any backing that Jake has
not talked to any parents or to what degree or variation.

As for what Jake thinks…I’m just kidding, I have no idea what he thinks.

Andy


On Thu, Jan 26, 2023 at 10:01 AM Peter Buchthal <pbucht...@gmail.com> wrote:

>
> Thank you Jake for engaging in a discussion about our school and the
> issues.  Lincoln Talk is a great way for the town's voters to learn more
> about the issues our town faces.  Through online debate and open meetings,
> hopefully, our town will get better and stronger.
>
> I'm not sure I follow your reasoning.  At one point your email says: "if
> you keep hunting for new data, you can inadvertently bend the data to your
> will and draw a biased conclusion" but further down you also mention "I am
> confident that there is more data out there explaining the value of our
> towns investment and the exemplary outcomes for Lincoln K-8 students."
>
> Could you please define "exemplary outcomes" and how would you
> approach looking for this new data without drawing a pre-ordained, biased
> conclusion that you didn't want to make in your first sentence above.
>
> Do you have other examples in mind when you say that high-schools have a
> lower cost per student. Using the DESE data from our neighbors, four out of
> five elementary/middle schools have lower cost per student than their
> corresponding high-schools.  The DESE data for Lincoln includes Hanscom and
> Lincoln together.
>
> [image: Screenshot 2023-01-25 at 10.37.26 PM.png]
>
> This has been debated in the past, but I would argue that  Lincoln's
> district is unique because of Hanscom and  a higher percentage METCO
> population as both are paid for by third parties.   If you look exclusively
> at students paid for by local taxpayers we are way more expensive than
> Weston.
>
> Do you think our ultra small class sizes in the middle school is a good
> use of taxpayer funds?  We currently have 4 sections each of 7th and 8th
> graders where the average class is only 13 students.  Our maximum
> recommended  class size in 7th and 8th grade is 24 students.  Why
> shouldn't we drop a section in each grade?  Do you think it's possible
> that  our poor engagement numbers from our middle schoolers may come from
> the fact the our classes are too small and students don't have enough of
> their friends with them in class all day?   Do you support rubber stamping
> next year's school budget that maintains this year's ultra small classes in
> our middle school?   Is there something in our demographics that gives you
> (and our other current school committee members) optimism that our middle
> school will soon get a significant increase in students that warrants
> maintaining 4 sections in 6th, 7th and 8th grade?  Only the current 4th
> graders have 4 sections.  K,1,2,3,5 all are running with 3 sections.
>
> I believe candidates for any elected office should have opinions about
> what is going well and what needs improvement in their soon to be governed
> organizations.
>
> I admire your optimism that everything is great and the future will only
> get better.  But, as a candidate running for school office without ever
> having a child in our school, may I suggest you talk to as many parents
> with children of different grades as possible so that they share with you
> their experiences as a parent at the Lincoln School.  This will allow you
> to further develop  priorities and ideas to improve the school.  We all
> look forward to learning more from you and asking further questions on the
> issues.
>
> Thank you so much,
> Peter
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