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How about overcrowding affecting the teachers, whose time and resources are already spread so thin, never mind the lack of physical space-does no one recognize or care about that? In my center school (also a base school), the AAP classrooms in 3rd grade all have 29-30 kids per class, and even first grade is up to 28 per class. That is ridiculous, esp for first!
Some hard choices need to be made in the public education realm, and I am glad the county is starting to address them, though they need parents and teachers working together to affect positive change. |
Number of students in the school overall has nothing to do with class size. That's done by formula. |
I'd avoid attempting to pit center vs. non-center schools as there are several schools in the Eastern part of the county with this exact same set up (and some things are worse at some of these schools than what you describe). And this won't help you make friends in these discussion either - folks who can stand up with you across the county and support the overall adjustment of the overcrowded schools - AAP or not. This shouldn't be an us vs. them mentality or approach, and you should strive to avoid the divisiveness that your comments are creating. If we work together we can pressure the district to do more about the overcrowding in general. I am speaking as a parent of a child at a very overcrowded non-AAP school, and a MS student that is denied center services because we choose to keep her at her base school instead of busing her to an already overcrowded center MS. |
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While I can't comment on all center-based school, I have been at a non-center based school over 8 years. Before our renovation, we had no art room and no music room and lots of kids were in trailers. And we were sending lots of kids to the center-based elementary school, so it could have been much worse. Once our school was renovated and expanded, we were able to have enough room for most programs, although every room is currently filled so there is no room for growth. Our local school houses a language immersion program that draws many students from outside our cluster, and we need to have separate classrooms for those students.
In short, I'm not sure that overcrowding of elementary school buildings is in all cases is directly related to whether or not they house an AAP center. Each school has different program and different needs. The School Board should be taking a close look at the overcrowding issues on a school by school bases (or perhaps by cluster). With regard to middle schools, under the staff proposal EVERY middle school would have their enrollment dramatcially change in additional to many school having to develop an entirely new program (for perhaps less than 20 students). And I haven't seen any evidence that changing every middle school will have any impact on the issues at the elementary school level. |
| Some parents in Cluster 1 have organized a meeting to discuss the issue of eliminating center-based AA programs at middle schools. The meeting is on Tuesday, November 27 at the Great Falls Public Library at 10:15. Anyone with interest in the issue is welcome to attend. |
| 07:33 overcrowding in the classrooms leads to an overcrowded school that can't be resolved by increasing class size. Arlington is overcrowded they say, but their class sizes are much smaller. If they increased class size, they wouldn't be having as many overcrowding issues. FCPS has increased class size and also has not planned for future classrooms at many of these elementary schools so there is no room for these children to go. |
And the point of this is...? A gripe session? Are your kids in the center program? Do you just not want other kids to be in the center programs? This meeting makes zero sense based on what you posted. |
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Why doesn't FCPS make use of some of its former school buildings and renovate them for use as schools? Seems that there are many of them and I am sure a renovation would be faster than building a new school:
http://commweb.fcps.edu/directory/bylevel.cfm?level=Administrative |
I read the post to mean that some Cluster 1 parents with AAP kids who might get assigned or reassigned from Longfellow or Kilmer to Cooper planned to get together and discuss the pros and cons with each other and others who might be interested. I expect the OP would be happy to rescind the invitation if you want to be a total jerk about it. |
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Making every MS an AAP center dilutes the program, since principals make decisions based on class size + number of teachers alloted per school. I predict MS AAP will, in most cases, not have enough enrollment to remain a separate curriculum, and will get lumped in with open-enrollment Honors classes to increase class size. That's what happens at Local Level IV ES-- children are added to the AAP classes to balance class size.
On a personal note, there is NO comparison between Kilmer and Cooper. I was so happy that my kids would go to Kilmer, now I'm told we're probably thrown back into drug-happy, "my dad makes more money than yours" Cooper environment. And having the same classmates from elementary to high school is a non-issue-- who cares? Can't you make new friends? |
[list]What is the point of AAP, period! But especially in MS. There is already honors. Is that not a good education? If so then FCPS needs to look at the big picture. Why is honors not meeting the advanced, higher acheiving learners? Or is this not good enough either? geez...! |
| Honors is open enrollment. Since everyone is brilliant and special these days, the Honors classes are watered down for the strugglers so they don't get left behind, instead of suggesting, perhaps, that regular class might be a better fit. |
A lot of people would prefer to keep their kids within the same pyramid, to the extent possible. You are kidding yourself if you do not think there are also rich kids and drugs at Kilmer. Assuming you are correct in your characterization of Cooper, however, the tone there might change with more AAP kids. If nothing else, people would pay more attention to the students' academic efforts, and less attention to when they get into trouble. |
This arrogant talk about the "strugglers" is great to read. It's like reliving the election all over again and hearing Romney blather on about the "takers." |
No, it is not. |