Exactly. Blair SMACS was brought to Blair at the very beginning to combat the inequity between western and eastern county, and now the regional model will restore and strengthen the segregation and resource disparity. |
No, yesterday they described it as only a portion of the program seats being dedicated to the home school students, and the rest being for the other schools in that region. |
But they didn't give actual numbers yesterday, did they? Of course not. Because they have little idea what the programs will look like, and no idea yet what those program (physical building) requirements will be, which has an impact on the number of student seats that will be available. Then, factor in population growth, which increases home catchment student populations. East county will have a limited number of students being able to get into west county schools. Meanwhile, the east county schools are being made to weaken, likely significantly, the programs that have provided the east county schools academic achievement. |
They said 100 seats for the home school and 200–240 seats for the rest of the region, but presumably that is pretty preliminary. But with those numbers, kids elsewhere in the region would be about half as likely to get in as kids in the host school. |
They did have numbers on slide 43: 200-240 regional seats plus 100 local seats each for two programs at GHS. I don't know if those are representative of all programs or just how those particular programs might be proportioned. |
Holy inequity, Batman! The Joker is making access to magnets harder from some zip codes than from others! But what do you expect from the system that has persisted in keeping the four local-school Centers for Enriched Study with much higher seat-to-student-population ratios, the Potomac-students-before-others-get-spots Mandarin Immersion program and the local set-aside for the criteria-based MS programs that sees kids from, e.g., Takoma Park several times as likely to be afforded the magnet education opportunity as kids from other areas in the overall program catchment. Of course, they'll say something like, "each school will have its own magnet, so it all evens out," missing the point, perhaps deliberately, as not all magnets serve the same types of students. A math-focused student from School A should have the same chance of getting into a math-focused magnet as a similar student from School B. That should be the case whether School A hosts the math magnet, School B hosts the math magnet or School C hosts the math magnet. Ditto for arts-focused students vis-a-vis an arts-focused magnet or healthcare-interested students vis-a-vis s healthcare-focused magnet. There may be some equity-based justification for having a local set-aside, perhaps to account for differences in opportunities among the school catchments (e.g., Algebra in 6th being offered routinely at one school's feeders but not at another's, in the math case) that would lead to students of similar underlying ability presenting different profiles at the time of magnet consideration. However, making that set-aside any greater than the proportional size of the student body for the school versus the region is setting up, yet again, a prejudiced system. |
Did you even watch the presentation and discussion? |
Why? Did they say something like, "Oh, our mistake. That local set-aside in the Gaithersburg example should be more or less population-proportional. Please ignore that disproportionate number on the slide."? |
I'm not doing your homework for you. Watch the video. |
I'm not doing their homework. Chit chat on a video isn't a policy. The published paperwork is all just thoughts and prayers. |
Whoever wrote this last comment - please email it to boe@mcpsmd.org |
Some of the BOE are aware of the fact that Blair was the high school with the worst academic outcomes in the county back in the 1980s. And we will head back that way if areawide access to enrolling high achieving students is curtailed. |
My DS graduated #1 in his engineering program at UMD (Honors College) a few years back (so I know he’s talented at math). He was split out into accelerated math in first grade and stayed on that track.(I wish they still did that and I think it made a difference.) But when he got to high school (a W), we insisted he take Calc AB and then AP Stats rather than Calc BC. He took all the Science APs as well, plus a bunch of other APs. Maybe 13 total. He also did a lot of other activities along the way. Just a thought about these issues. There are other pathways to success. You want your student taking Honors section Calc at UMD and I would imagine the same is true at MIT, GA Tech, Hopkins, CMU etc. It’s outstanding. |
The school district is pulling numbers out of the air at this point. Look at where new developments are going in the county. Regional seat apportionment will be decreased to allow for local students who must be given access to their local schools. We'll have to see what the final boundaries are for schools, but take a look at current capacities and general enrollment at the high schools to see what the numbers of available seats are. And how long will it take for a school system that doesn't allocate sufficient staffing and resources for professional learning to build regional programs that will attract high achieving cohorts? Do you think west county students are going to sign up for programs in east county? |
I think they should just add more countywide programs. Not sure why this is so hard. |