Not once did I mention race in all of this. ATS has proven kids of all races and income level can be high achievers. I’m sure there are many, many black and Hispanic children on the ATS waitlist. It isn’t just white families that believe in the program. So why not create an opt-in version at EVERY school. You get the benefits of staying in your neighborhood school while having access to higher expectations (if you desire it). |
They go have big affordable housing buildings on the Rosslyn Ballston corridor. A huge one is being built in Rosslyn right now. The affordable housing nonprofits build them where it's feasible for them. I do agree that they need to make an effort to integrate the elementary schools, though. |
Yep there's a huge affordable housing building literally right next to HB and I think there's another behind it too. Black and brown kids and teens are in the park next to HB all the time shooting hoops and hanging out. Can you imagine what the reaction would have been from some North Arlingtonians if the neighborhood middle school had been built there? |
There isn't staffing or space in the schools to make a separate program within a school. |
Yup. They talk like APS has all the money to expand programs across the system. |
ATS has successful outcomes for kids of all socioeconomic levels and races b/c all those kids have one thing in common- parents who are invested in their kids education. Everyone there had to opt in. Its not the 'education model' its the invested parents. In general lower socioeconomic status is just a proxy for less involved parents, there certainly are parents of lower socioeconomic status who are invested in their kids education. If you created an "ats" in every school, all you would be doing is further segregating the involved parents from the less involved parents. I have many friends in south arlington who tried their neighborhood school for a year- they had rose colored glasses- "I'm going to be an involved parent," etc. For a variety of different reasons, it didn't work. Some of them lotteried their children into an option school. Some of them went private. Some of them homeschooled. I don't know what the answer is- Of course the option schools are contributing to the economic segregation in Arlington. Would getting rid of the option schools reduce that economic segregation??? maybe? maybe more families would go private or move?? maybe some combination??? FWIW, my family was in immersion and pulled out after a couple of years b/c it was not a good fit. We returned to our North Arlington neighborhood school. The immersion school had a vastly more involved parent community then the north arlington neighborhood school, even though the neighborhood school was 'richer.' Option schools do attract a more involved parent. |
Well, since half of the existing population would opt in, you would keep the existing numbers of teachers and students — just change what each group is doing. It isn’t that hard. |
If you separate the kids with involved parents from the general population (by having them opt in), it would demonstrate how a child can succeed regardless of race or income level. Perhaps more families would opt in over time. |
lol. Ok |
Wut. Lol. |
"Involved parents" = those who are stay at home moms/work from home Sucks to have three jobs, a couple of preschool kids at home, and unreliable transportation. |
I bet most parents want more of what ATS is doing. I do. I’d love for my school to send homework. We do things at home but I don’t really know what they’re working on school or see much schoolwork since the pandemic. |
| I don’t want more of what ATS does. I want more of what Campbell does, but with a different principal. |
Go private. |
All students at ATS have stay at home mothers? Keep digging for excuses! |