Yes staffing is based on the number of students. You could argue that the district allocation needs to be reviewed for all schools but advocating both not overcrowded and getting to retain more staff makes no sense. |
Yeah I think that's why people are a bit concerned about the potential changes being rushed through. There's been a flurry of activity on our PTA and neighborhood listservs, I get the sense a lot parents were unaware until recently. As of now, we are zoned for Einstein and my big concern is the current lack of AP courses. I don't think it's crazy for families to prefer AP over IB, but under the new model students would have to apply to a special program to go anywhere else. Whereas previously you had a good chance to get into another DCC school. Am I understanding this right? |
Yes, but in the DCC choice process Einstein students had a good chance of getting into Kennedy or Northwood but a slim chance of getting into Blair or Wheaton. |
The staffing is a huge issue as it impacts course offerings. So, if they move 400 students out, how many teachers and classes will be lost given the already limited offerings. |
It’s fair because anything new has to start somewhere. The fairness is in the opportunity. Additionally, the new program has the opportunity to learn best practices from the Einstein program and there is also opportunity for new ideas. |
That’s not a staffing issue that’s a course offering issue. |
Right- I thought one of the complaints about Einstein was that is overcrowded.... |
The problem is there will not be the dcc so you can maybe try to cosa but no transportation. IB is good for some students, ap is good for others. It would be nice to have both at each school so students can choose. |
It is but staffing is the excuse for course offerings so reducing numbers will make that worse. The portable situation is terrible. It’s a no win situation. And, if the arts program goes there may be zero appeal to Einstein and some may choose private or move. |
This cavalier throw the existing students under the bus attitude is deeply disturbing. That’s not fair or opportunity. |
The number of teachers will always be proportional to the number of students. When a school is extremely overcrowded and there's a boundary change to correct that, then yes, some teachers will be transferred. Which is appropriate and sensible. |
??? Now you’re just making up stuff. No one is throwing the existing students under the bus. In fact the existing students get to finish in their programs as is. You’re afraid of change and new things. |
I would agree with you if they were planning to do the rollout in a thoughtful and phased way, where they start by adding 1 or 2 new magnets at a time and have the ability to execute a strong transition with appropriate staffing, support from VAC teachers, etc. And then if there is demand for more programs, adding more a few years later so that second transition can be done well too. Instead they are planning to launch 5 new regional visual arts programs, plus dozens of other new programs, all in the same year. Recipe for disaster. |
This +1. The majority concerns expressed here are to SLOW DOWN. Do it one or two at a time, demonstrating a successful pilot model, and people accept for another expansion. It’s the same concern on the Bethesda magazine article from study team members. I don’t get what makes CO and Dr. Taylor so deaf and stubborn on an idea that the majority have similar concerns about. |
Claiming existing programs will stay “as is” is deliberately naive. The math says otherwise. |