Why, thanks! I'd expect nothing less from this thread. |
Kenmore parent here. Our concerns are splitting up more of the neighborhoods that feed to Kenmore, the traffic, and making the school more economically and ethnically segregated. In both the boundary shift map and moving immersion to Kenmore those things happen. We lose walkers, neighborhoods are split, and we lose more affluent neighborhoods. None of those are good things for the school. I guess I’m not convinced why IB and Immersion can’t coexist, or why moving the program where we have space in a corridor that isn’t experiencing growth via up-zoning, even if it’s not ideal for some current families, isn’t better than what they have proposed. I don’t understand why moving the MS to a school with a lot of Hispanic kids who are not and cannot be in Immersion will benefit the kids at the school, or why moving it to WMS would harm it. If you were also talking about making Campbell or Carlin Springs the Immersion ES, then maybe this would make sense to me, because then you’d accidentally capture more EL students in ES and perhaps keep them for MS if the K-8 programs were in the buildings they believed to be their neighborhood schools. But you aren’t helping more native speakers who are EL by moving just the MS program, when the EL kids at Kenmore can’t enroll. So it seems to me that moving it to WMS would have no impact on EL kids. Am I wrong? |
Kids DO have an option to join immersion in MS (they can test into the program). But I agree it is not common. I would like it to be more common, but I do think it's a common problem for a lot of native Spanish speakers (who have gone to English only schools) to not be able to read/write in spanish at the grade level they would need to test into the program. So I understand this concern. All that being said, APS moved the ELL program under the immersion branch meaning that immersion has the necessary resources to teach ELL. This doesn't mean that kids need to be in the immersion program. AT Gunston the immersion staff also teaches ELL. So bringing immersion to Gunston would theoretically bring a very strong ELL staff to help kids. Third, the idea is not that it will help kids immediately the day it moves into Kenmore, but that by moving to Kenmore more Spanish speakers can join the ES and then continue on to MS at Kenmore (but it would take years for the impact of this clearly). There was initially talk about moving the Claremont Immersion program to Carlin Springs, but I am not sure what is going on with that now. |
It’s not a current trend. Going as far back as the McKinley expansion completed 7 years ago (designed far prior to that) they were stating that they were building and renovating to this larger size. |
All of this talk has caused me to really look into test scores. As a county we should be ashamed at the scores for the economically disadvantaged population. Honestly, we should be moving heaven and earth to address that instead of essentially doing nothing. |
There's a lot more to be said for the synergy that can be created between a school with many Spanish speaking families and hosting the immersion program, even if not all the native Spanish speaking kids are in the program. For instance, all PTA and Principal communications should be bilingual. Back to school night and award ceremonies can more easily support families that don't speak English. Spanish speaking english learners are more likely to be able to communicate with other students in extra curriculars or socially, as there will be less of a language barrier. English speakers learning Spanish are more likely to be in immersive environments. Student groups and activities can support language and cultural events. The library can have a larger Spanish language collection. It really allows APS to build a strong ELL program AND immersion program by having staff and faculty wear two hats. My understanding is that immersion students are only separate for a few classes a day and spend the rest of the time mixed with the rest of the MS. There's a lot of overlap. |
This already happens at Kenmore, as well as our neighborhood ES and all the Title 1 schools in SA that I’ve encountered. I guess one concern is that by “consolidating” Hispanic kids we are not really better supporting them. They should be able to walk into any ES or MS or HS in APS and be met with adequate services. If we push them all into certain ones, how are we not steering them away from others and increasing segregation of all types? I am really bothered by this trend. It’s not much different than during segregation, similar arguments were made that certain children would be more comfortable and better served by being kept separate. If you move it to WMS, WMS would then have bilingual staff and offer some of those things you mention, so you’re opening another door for Hispanic kids rather than penning them all into once place and one experience. Something just doesn’t sit right with me about this plan. |
Hmmm. I support Kenmore as the location; but Swanson wouldn't be unreasonable. Moving a larger segment of kids up to WMS works just like the current counter-clockwise effect that moves Hamm students to WMS. I'm SA and not directly impacted by any of this; so don't accuse me of being a Taylor/Hamm parent. Which area - Swanson or Hamm - is denser and more likely to be overcrowded again the soonest after whatever enrollment balancing is done? If Hamm, then immersion could go Swanson. If Swanson, then it should go to Kenmore. |
McKinley is a middle school? |
Anywhere you place an option school "displaces" some neighborhood. Any school that would not be an option school would otherwise be a neighborhood school. |
No, it doesn't work that way. If Immersion was at WMS, staff wouldn't be able to wear two hats and work with both EL and immersion students because there aren't other EL students. The PTA wouldn't magically start holding meetings in Spanish to support immersion parents that were thrust upon them. It would likely always be two separate groups, not an integrated community. Hispanic families aren't going to move to WMS zone because of strong support for Spanish speakers. That's not going to happen and doesn't make sense. The immersion program isn't Title 1, so it's not importing low income students to move the program to Kenmore. Immersion doesn't need to be at a school with the most ELs, but it also shouldn't be at a school with almost no Spanish speaking ELs. |
THIS!!! 1000%!!!! I still don't think moving the program to WMS will do what those advocates say it will (bring more diversity to WMS) because I really do not believe as many native Spanish speaking students who are zoned for TJ, Gunston, or even Kenmore, will continue on with the program in the WMS location. I hope I'm wrong and maybe immersion to WMS will spark some cultural and social enlightenment within the far white north. The program could continue and abandon it's 50/50 native/non-native speaking framework; but if immersion merely becomes another special program primarily for more wealthy white students, I might start advocating to end the program. Regardless, PP is a million % spot-on about the segregation. It is time for Arlington Co and APS to stop concentrating poverty, diversify the schools and neighborhoods across the entire County, and establish support infrastructure and services so that any family can easily access whatever services it needs and any student in APS can move to any school, not be significantly behind or significantly ahead of their peers and receive the supportive services they need. Whoever you are, PP, you have my vote for SB. |
I believe the point is APS as a general principle does not believe all schools should be roughly the same size because it's not smart planning. We see this at the elementary and high school level. When they have an opportunity, they build more seats. So the idea that Hamm shouldn't have been any bigger and was kept pretty close to the size of the smaller and much older middle schools (Swanson and WMS) was caving to pressure from the parent community at the time. The same parent community that is now pressuring them. |
You do not seem to understand how the immersion program at Gunston works. If you move the program, you implement it the same way at the new location as you do in the current one. Be careful what you ask for, WMS. If you don't really want a bunch of Spanish-speaking kids in your school or a much stronger focus on Hispanic culture, then don't be advocating for this. |
I don't think Swanson is unreasonable either on paper. It's what the PP said, it's already overcrowded so it impacts more kids. |