| I agree change will take a few years...another Blair alum. I might risk it this year. |
I would be more concerned about transportation changing |
Sadly it will as there will be lots less advanced elective options for 11th and 12th grade, with less staff overall. This was confirmed at the open house. |
That's why I discussed the core academic essence, which in my perspective is not the advanced electives. If one's goal in attending is specific advanced electives, then yes there is definitely more risk that what is there in three or four years will not meet expectations. That being said, I would also note that the volume and variety of such electives is far greater than when I was there and I don't think the lack of variety will necessarily be harmful. Though for what it is worth I took few such electives anyway, instead taking ones in the humanities or AP. |
This is not true. |
Nobody knows. MCPS doesn't have a plan. |
| Blair student here - willing to answer questions parents have about the current program and the experience. Can't answer anything about how things might change in the future. |
Go ahead tell it all |
What is your specific question? Can't really "tell it all" because there is so much to say. |
Exactly. Programs change all the time. Personnel changes have occurred since the program’s initiation. Assuming the program is going to be worse with no significant evidence of that is worthless. Ignore the naysayers and decide based on child’s interest, willingness to do the work, and desire to contribute to the school community. |
The magnet coordinator has gone to central office to rescue the superintendent's regional programming plan. (Good luck Mr. Ostrander.) The quality will change when the teachers begin to leave and you don't know how replacements will be staffed. The magnet currently has 100 seats per grade. Ostrander will make sure that sufficient seats remain in the program to hold together the curriculum offerings, but again, who is teaching it? Once School Year 2027 begins, school bus transportation will likely collapse, as it did in the superintendent's previous school district, where he implemented regional programs in a district with just 5 schools. we will have 26 high schools in 2027. If you live in Blair's geographical catchment area, you probably will be OK. But if you are dependent on the promise that Superintendent Taylor made to hold in place transportation supports across the county for legacy magnet students, you might have real trouble. I think that is the first thing to be canceled when the transportation system collapses. |
And you believe other schools you have access to will offer these advanced elective options? |