Our kids at Franklin got a lot of grammar instruction. Their writing also significantly improved due to the quality of instruction they got in ELA. |
Oh sweetie, those things have been all over Loudoun county for years longer than they've been in Fairfax county. They're prolific not to fill a gap, but to help kids get ahead of others. |
Glad to see I am not the only sour grapes here. I too cant fathom the fact other kids want to learn more than mine. |
Then move, dumbass. We don't want you here. |
OP you have to understand that this is an anonymous board and probably half the people that post here don't even have children in FCPS, they are just political trolls trying to get people riled up to vote Republican in the next election. FCPS is fine. LCPS is fine. If you have smart children, which it sounds like you do, they'll do great in any school. |
OP, this is the perfect example of a republican trollmwho probably doesn't even have kids in the school system. OR they have one child in AAP and think their child is the god's gift. The only difference between AAP and regular is that in low income schools (which you're not looking at), AAP segregates the grades and leaves out the hispanic and black kids, and in all schools, AAP kids get advanced math. |
OMG - the point was that these are not here because the education is bad, it's because people want enrichment for their children. No sour grapes. If my kid was interested in extra math, I'd sign them up, too, but right now, my child is excelling in school and we're all happy where they're at. Some parents are bit more ambitious than others. This is a reflection of the parents, not the schools. |
This is every school system, ding dong, everyone redistricts at some point. FCPS is just huge and far more segregated than most places, so it feels like a big impact to racists like you. |
If you were truly satisfied with your student's performance, you wouldn’t feel the need to compare. That urge comes from a sense of inadequacy—both in yourself as a parent and in where your child stands. Sounds like a classic case of sour grapes! Is it so hard to accept that some parents may be more dedicated and their advanced students are ahead? Be content with your own situation—comparison only leads to envy and misery. |
There's a whole lot of obvious projection in this comment... |
LCPS doesn't do much in elementary school, while Fairfax seems to be trying to get rid of AAP.
Middle school math track is a little better in Loudoun vs Fairfax. Loudoun implemented VMPI early but has now backtracked and has many more kids taking algebra 1 by 7th grade. |
FCPS's AAP program (mildly advanced math, reading group discussions) is underwhelming. Your child's home environment has a better indication of success over the school.
However, I find that 90% of the benefit of AAP is the grouping of children and quality of teacher. Sure, there is the occasional trouble-maker, or maybe a newer teacher. But this pales in comparison with some of the other classes. Most of the common problems you'll encounter (bullying, status competition, teacher who can't control the classroom) are just ...... less. Not having those problems leads to a better home-life dynamic for us. For that reason, I'd lean towards FCPS over LCPS. If you're basing your decision solely on education though - any high SES area will largely be the same, so I have no input here for you. |
DEI nonsense has crept into lcps. Previously, Algebra 1 in 6th grade was a widely known option presented to all elementary school students that met certain MAP and SOL criteria. Now only the educated families know about the advanced path to complete Algebra 2 in 8th grade. |
It has become more haphazard, because a key school board staffer supports eliminating algebra in middle school. Now there is more testing with IOWA, and no consistent messaging. |
Lcps students dont “miss a class”, they alternate between A and B days to the academies, not missing class. |