I think it's likely that's where we're headed given that it was an AAP task force recommendation that was only slowed because not all middle schools were deemed ready. but I think the ones that are, Thoreau, Cooper, etc. will go that route sooner rather than later. |
| I think if they make Cooper an AAP center next year, they should wait a year or two before thinking about Thoreau and some of the other schools that feed into Marshall, Madison, and Oakton. |
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Cooper is a no brainer. Cooper is expected to have room, Longfellow is bursting. There are enough AAP kids in the Cooper boundary to run a decent program. Howver, I do expect the "change is bad", the" we don't want *our* children to be the first ones" contigents to push back.
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Critical mass is not a concern of FCPS. They just created new a AAP center at Lemon Road, knowing it would not have critical mass, and have now had to commit themselves to 2 classes in 4th and 5th grades no matter how small the classes are. They have not committed to two classes for 3rd grade. |
Sure it is. Critical mass is part of the report to the School Board and will be discussed tonight. |
There is always the lip service. |
I have no idea what you mean. You sound like a disgruntled Lemon Road parent. |
| Likely. I think Franklin MS will become an AAP center. Franklin is under capacity and Rachel Carson (current MS center) is over capacity. |
| From all the responses: it seems like the decision is in "go slow" mode so my conclusion is that there will perhaps be more GT Center Middle Schools in 2 years but NOT ALL Middle Schools in FXCNTY will have a GT Center. Really it seems like MOST middle schools WILL NOT have a GT Center in 2 years time but, perhaps, eventually.. |
+1 I think AAP Centers at middle schools will expand where there are areas of overcrowding only, at least for the next 2 - 5 years. |
No, I am a disgruntled participant in the proposed revisions to the SR&R that were rejected by the School Board. |
| Will Kilmer have enough critical mass if the Cooper kids are moved back? |
Kilmer AAP currently outnumbers gen ed. I think they'll be just fine. Critical mass isn't the problem at either Kilmer or Longfellow. |
False. Rocky Run is the only middle school in Fairfax where AAP outnumbers GenEd. |
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right. bad information from a school board session.
AAP students currently represent 35% of the Kilmer student body vs. 58% in Gen. Ed (remainder are in special ed). Even so don't see a danger in losing "critical mass" with more than 200 AAP kids in both 7 and 8th grade classes. Instead, I again am wondering why 35% of kids in a school would need special services and am wondering how many of the 58% could do a similar level of work. |