I believe that the Wilson building has been used for this multiple times -- I've heard about Glebe using it during renovations as well as Drew. |
| If the Board ends up adding capacity to Barcroft and Randolph instead of building a new school at TJ, some boundaries will probably change because those will stay neighborhood schools, whereas TJ might have been a choice school. |
| The New School isn't behind anymore. It's going to open on time. |
You do know that all the Nottingham kids went to school in the Wilson building when Nottingham was rebuilt, right? |
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Either way, the school system is re-opening the boundary discussions tomorrow -
http://www.apsva.us/moreseats |
| *banging head against the wall* |
| Is there any chance this "over crowding" situation at the elementary level could be temporary, over the next 4-5 years? I guess this is an unknown, but I'm concerned drastic changes will be made when the surplus of kids is not long-term. Is it possible Arlington will continue to grow at the rate it has been, when it comes to families with young children? |
maybe but surplus capacity is much easier problem then overcrowding. |
I think that many people agree that the overcrowding will end at some point, but I think 4-5 years is low. Current infants and toddlers will just be entering elementary school in 4-5 years. At least in my neighborhood, there seems to be a continuing baby boom. Of course, it would be helpful if APS could get a better handle on the number of future students. Leasing space could create capacity in a less permanent way, but I understand that they are prohibited from using bond money to renovate leased space. So I guess that's a non-starter. |
+1 so then maybe the streetcar can be re-directed to pass through north of lee highway
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| There is a continuing baby boom. More houses are being sold to builders and families with lots of little kids move in. The number of kids going to storytime at my library has tripled in the past 5 years! If there is a slow down it's WAY in the future. |
Well, although this seems like a big pain in the tush, ultimately as long as our children continue to receive a superb education as APS is known for, this is really good news for our kids and property values. We are just in the midst of a bit of turmoil while figuring this out, but in the end hopefully it will all be worth it. |
They have not built any new elementary schools--it's all been managed with trailers so far, and there are enough trailers around to fill six schools. (For real.) Enrollment would have to *drop* by 25% just to get rid of the trailers and return to the building use levels we had ten years ago. APS enrollment may not grow as fast five or ten years from now, but I really doubt it is going to stop growing and then shrink by 25% anytime soon. |
| has anyone been able to locate or access the documents that the board was supposed to disclose after the meeting last night? |