Initial boundary options for Woodward study area are up

Anonymous
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Anonymous wrote:Rosemary Hills illustrates the naive cruelty of option 3. Rosemary Hills already goes to a “good” school in BCC, but option 3 sends them 10 minutes further to Whitman. To what end?

If the answer is “to raise the FARMS rate at Whitman,” that’s sort of missing the forrest for the trees.


They should necessarily raise farms and remove it from other schools as those schools loose extra funding.


They should do this by punishing the very kids this should purportedly help?


They aren’t helping kids by bussing them across town. Instead strengthen their schools. Give our kids the same opportunities as yours.


Yes, those specific kids already go to BCC and get the desired same opportunities. Why send them 10 minutes farther? Who is that helping?


And the rest of the student population? If DCUM is leaning heavily into "no bussing" and "it's unjust to subject higher-poverty populations to long bus rides" then DCUM needs to get behind making enormously differential funding per stident available so that those same opportunities are offered to all. Only 3 at Northwood interested in AP Econ? A teacher for that would need to be funded if one is funded for the 25 interested at WJ -- as we know, virtual and MC don't provide a similar enough experience.

And that might mean even higher class sizes at Whitman.

And/or higher taxes.

Or the populations can be evened out, but that generally means...bussing.

Pick your poison.


You’re creating a false choice by speaking for the people you’re purportedly trying to help and also making a weird hierarchy of their needs.

In my personal hierarchy (yours may vary), having a safe local school that isp a part of my community is priority #1. Access to AP Econ is maybe priority #250?

To this day, I get a warm feeling whenever I drive by my high school. Do I remember AP Econ? Nope, I remember endless afternoons with my friends on the outdoor basketball court. Afternoons that wouldn’t have been possible if I had to take the bus 45 minutes away.

Do those Northwood kids value AP Econ enough to ride the bus everyday from Wheaton to Whitman and give up those long afternoons? Maybe! But maybe not? I don’t know and neither do you.

If they do, then by all means, let’s pay for it.

That’s why the county sent out this survey.



Do you understand you cannot simply switch schools for a class? And, if you can, please let us know how. We asked and were refused. Mine would gladly ride the bus or we'd drive them. Or, better, how about offering those classes in these kids schools so all kids have equal access.


We have all kinds of middle school students taking HS classes first period then getting bused to the middle school. You can indeed offer a class for one period.


Ask, we asked and were told no. Can they, yes, will they, no.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Rosemary Hills illustrates the naive cruelty of option 3. Rosemary Hills already goes to a “good” school in BCC, but option 3 sends them 10 minutes further to Whitman. To what end?

If the answer is “to raise the FARMS rate at Whitman,” that’s sort of missing the forrest for the trees.


They should necessarily raise farms and remove it from other schools as those schools loose extra funding.


They should do this by punishing the very kids this should purportedly help?


They aren’t helping kids by bussing them across town. Instead strengthen their schools. Give our kids the same opportunities as yours.


Yes, those specific kids already go to BCC and get the desired same opportunities. Why send them 10 minutes farther? Who is that helping?


And the rest of the student population? If DCUM is leaning heavily into "no bussing" and "it's unjust to subject higher-poverty populations to long bus rides" then DCUM needs to get behind making enormously differential funding per stident available so that those same opportunities are offered to all. Only 3 at Northwood interested in AP Econ? A teacher for that would need to be funded if one is funded for the 25 interested at WJ -- as we know, virtual and MC don't provide a similar enough experience.

And that might mean even higher class sizes at Whitman.

And/or higher taxes.

Or the populations can be evened out, but that generally means...bussing.

Pick your poison.


You’re creating a false choice by speaking for the people you’re purportedly trying to help and also making a weird hierarchy of their needs.

In my personal hierarchy (yours may vary), having a safe local school that isp a part of my community is priority #1. Access to AP Econ is maybe priority #250?

To this day, I get a warm feeling whenever I drive by my high school. Do I remember AP Econ? Nope, I remember endless afternoons with my friends on the outdoor basketball court. Afternoons that wouldn’t have been possible if I had to take the bus 45 minutes away.

Do those Northwood kids value AP Econ enough to ride the bus everyday from Wheaton to Whitman and give up those long afternoons? Maybe! But maybe not? I don’t know and neither do you.

If they do, then by all means, let’s pay for it.

That’s why the county sent out this survey.



Do you understand you cannot simply switch schools for a class? And, if you can, please let us know how. We asked and were refused. Mine would gladly ride the bus or we'd drive them. Or, better, how about offering those classes in these kids schools so all kids have equal access.


Yes, I do understand. My point is I personally would not want to switch schools for a class and I doubt many kids do either. I respect and support if your opinion is different.

2 questions:
1. Isn’t that the point of the DCC?
2. What’s your school and what class aren’t you getting?


Not that poster, so nothing on 2, but

1. That only works if there isn't overcrowding at the two schools with more robust options, Wheaton & Blair. So it doesn't work.


It’s all the crap schools clumped together for the impression of choice so values don’t tank in specific zones. Sally can rest at east that the discount on the modest rambler they buy won’t impact their kids because they can opt out of Kennedy and so on. They don’t really want the whole county shuffling around. Notice how not one really desirable school is in a consortium, tells you all you really need to know.

The carrot programs are then sprinkled into schools that need help perception and demographics wise. Blair is proof that reverse bussing works, it was the first school to slip in the county and had a horrible reputation. Now it’s best bad high school school in county.


Can we talk about what makes a school like Blair "bad"? Many graduates are very successful in a variety of fields.


This is DCUM. Do you really need to ask? You know exactly what they mean.


I actually don't. I need it spelled out.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Rosemary Hills illustrates the naive cruelty of option 3. Rosemary Hills already goes to a “good” school in BCC, but option 3 sends them 10 minutes further to Whitman. To what end?

If the answer is “to raise the FARMS rate at Whitman,” that’s sort of missing the forrest for the trees.


They should necessarily raise farms and remove it from other schools as those schools loose extra funding.


They should do this by punishing the very kids this should purportedly help?


They aren’t helping kids by bussing them across town. Instead strengthen their schools. Give our kids the same opportunities as yours.


Yes, those specific kids already go to BCC and get the desired same opportunities. Why send them 10 minutes farther? Who is that helping?


And the rest of the student population? If DCUM is leaning heavily into "no bussing" and "it's unjust to subject higher-poverty populations to long bus rides" then DCUM needs to get behind making enormously differential funding per stident available so that those same opportunities are offered to all. Only 3 at Northwood interested in AP Econ? A teacher for that would need to be funded if one is funded for the 25 interested at WJ -- as we know, virtual and MC don't provide a similar enough experience.

And that might mean even higher class sizes at Whitman.

And/or higher taxes.

Or the populations can be evened out, but that generally means...bussing.

Pick your poison.


You’re creating a false choice by speaking for the people you’re purportedly trying to help and also making a weird hierarchy of their needs.

In my personal hierarchy (yours may vary), having a safe local school that isp a part of my community is priority #1. Access to AP Econ is maybe priority #250?

To this day, I get a warm feeling whenever I drive by my high school. Do I remember AP Econ? Nope, I remember endless afternoons with my friends on the outdoor basketball court. Afternoons that wouldn’t have been possible if I had to take the bus 45 minutes away.

Do those Northwood kids value AP Econ enough to ride the bus everyday from Wheaton to Whitman and give up those long afternoons? Maybe! But maybe not? I don’t know and neither do you.

If they do, then by all means, let’s pay for it.

That’s why the county sent out this survey.


It works for all sorts of needs, not just availability of AP Econ. Would the experience of a student needing accommodation at Whitman be better than that of a student with similar need at Wheaton, or would facility overutilization and relative plethora of high-needs students at the latter degrade that school's ability to provide the accommodation?

Safety first, of course, but does Wheaton provide as safe an environment as Whitman?

The remaining heirarchy? Well, at least one other poster has been noting, possibly repeatedly, the lack of advanced classes that their DC experienced and the brick wall they ran into when asking for access.

The 45-minute commute or no change is the false choice, here, when MCPS might avoid the former yet still provide reasonably equivalent educational experiences with gentler boundary shifts to address utilization while at the same time providing the greater differential funding suggested.

Regional survey responses, just like the "community pull" MCPS cites when explaining the lack of offerings at certain schools, suffers from the bias of differential exposure to and understanding of curricular programming among the communities surveyed.

Indeed, by all means, let's pay for it.


Whitman has lots of issues. Don’t kid yourself to think it’s better. Better is getting good teachers vs the actual school. Most dcc don’t want Whitman. If we did some of us would move there. Boundaries are separate issues to the course and activity offerings.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Rosemary Hills illustrates the naive cruelty of option 3. Rosemary Hills already goes to a “good” school in BCC, but option 3 sends them 10 minutes further to Whitman. To what end?

If the answer is “to raise the FARMS rate at Whitman,” that’s sort of missing the forrest for the trees.


They should necessarily raise farms and remove it from other schools as those schools loose extra funding.


They should do this by punishing the very kids this should purportedly help?


They aren’t helping kids by bussing them across town. Instead strengthen their schools. Give our kids the same opportunities as yours.


Yes, those specific kids already go to BCC and get the desired same opportunities. Why send them 10 minutes farther? Who is that helping?


And the rest of the student population? If DCUM is leaning heavily into "no bussing" and "it's unjust to subject higher-poverty populations to long bus rides" then DCUM needs to get behind making enormously differential funding per stident available so that those same opportunities are offered to all. Only 3 at Northwood interested in AP Econ? A teacher for that would need to be funded if one is funded for the 25 interested at WJ -- as we know, virtual and MC don't provide a similar enough experience.

And that might mean even higher class sizes at Whitman.

And/or higher taxes.

Or the populations can be evened out, but that generally means...bussing.

Pick your poison.


You’re creating a false choice by speaking for the people you’re purportedly trying to help and also making a weird hierarchy of their needs.

In my personal hierarchy (yours may vary), having a safe local school that isp a part of my community is priority #1. Access to AP Econ is maybe priority #250?

To this day, I get a warm feeling whenever I drive by my high school. Do I remember AP Econ? Nope, I remember endless afternoons with my friends on the outdoor basketball court. Afternoons that wouldn’t have been possible if I had to take the bus 45 minutes away.

Do those Northwood kids value AP Econ enough to ride the bus everyday from Wheaton to Whitman and give up those long afternoons? Maybe! But maybe not? I don’t know and neither do you.

If they do, then by all means, let’s pay for it.

That’s why the county sent out this survey.



Do you understand you cannot simply switch schools for a class? And, if you can, please let us know how. We asked and were refused. Mine would gladly ride the bus or we'd drive them. Or, better, how about offering those classes in these kids schools so all kids have equal access.


Yes, I do understand. My point is I personally would not want to switch schools for a class and I doubt many kids do either. I respect and support if your opinion is different.

2 questions:
1. Isn’t that the point of the DCC?
2. What’s your school and what class aren’t you getting?


Not that poster, so nothing on 2, but

1. That only works if there isn't overcrowding at the two schools with more robust options, Wheaton & Blair. So it doesn't work.


It’s all the crap schools clumped together for the impression of choice so values don’t tank in specific zones. Sally can rest at east that the discount on the modest rambler they buy won’t impact their kids because they can opt out of Kennedy and so on. They don’t really want the whole county shuffling around. Notice how not one really desirable school is in a consortium, tells you all you really need to know.

The carrot programs are then sprinkled into schools that need help perception and demographics wise. Blair is proof that reverse bussing works, it was the first school to slip in the county and had a horrible reputation. Now it’s best bad high school school in county.


It’s not a bad high school and if it’s so bad the rich should not send their kids there to the magnet. Sorry you are too good to live in our neighborhoods.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:For the people complaining about bussing, would you be okay if your kid was bused to let’s say Churchill? Someone then I think bussing would be okay..


No, because I don’t want my kid at Churchill. Or we’d move there.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Rosemary Hills illustrates the naive cruelty of option 3. Rosemary Hills already goes to a “good” school in BCC, but option 3 sends them 10 minutes further to Whitman. To what end?

If the answer is “to raise the FARMS rate at Whitman,” that’s sort of missing the forrest for the trees.


They should necessarily raise farms and remove it from other schools as those schools loose extra funding.


They should do this by punishing the very kids this should purportedly help?


They aren’t helping kids by bussing them across town. Instead strengthen their schools. Give our kids the same opportunities as yours.


Yes, those specific kids already go to BCC and get the desired same opportunities. Why send them 10 minutes farther? Who is that helping?


And the rest of the student population? If DCUM is leaning heavily into "no bussing" and "it's unjust to subject higher-poverty populations to long bus rides" then DCUM needs to get behind making enormously differential funding per stident available so that those same opportunities are offered to all. Only 3 at Northwood interested in AP Econ? A teacher for that would need to be funded if one is funded for the 25 interested at WJ -- as we know, virtual and MC don't provide a similar enough experience.

And that might mean even higher class sizes at Whitman.

And/or higher taxes.

Or the populations can be evened out, but that generally means...bussing.

Pick your poison.


You’re creating a false choice by speaking for the people you’re purportedly trying to help and also making a weird hierarchy of their needs.

In my personal hierarchy (yours may vary), having a safe local school that isp a part of my community is priority #1. Access to AP Econ is maybe priority #250?

To this day, I get a warm feeling whenever I drive by my high school. Do I remember AP Econ? Nope, I remember endless afternoons with my friends on the outdoor basketball court. Afternoons that wouldn’t have been possible if I had to take the bus 45 minutes away.

Do those Northwood kids value AP Econ enough to ride the bus everyday from Wheaton to Whitman and give up those long afternoons? Maybe! But maybe not? I don’t know and neither do you.

If they do, then by all means, let’s pay for it.

That’s why the county sent out this survey.



Do you understand you cannot simply switch schools for a class? And, if you can, please let us know how. We asked and were refused. Mine would gladly ride the bus or we'd drive them. Or, better, how about offering those classes in these kids schools so all kids have equal access.


You can request a COSA for a specialized class not available at your home school. That’s what we were told when we asked about a heritage language not available in our home school but available at another school.


I called the cosa office and applied and we were denied as the other schools were too overcrowded.
Anonymous
You can have one teacher teach AP Lang (for example) at one school in the am and another school in the pm. There are ways to do this.

Does this tie into the whole gifted and talented advocacy separately going on?? Because I’m all for G&T in EVERY school. Forget the boundary study - let the high achievers achieve!
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:You can have one teacher teach AP Lang (for example) at one school in the am and another school in the pm. There are ways to do this.

Does this tie into the whole gifted and talented advocacy separately going on?? Because I’m all for G&T in EVERY school. Forget the boundary study - let the high achievers achieve!


Correct or they could do it virtually but they are not willing. Lots of ways to do things but it takes a willing principal and central office to think outside the box. Gifted should be in every school.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Rosemary Hills illustrates the naive cruelty of option 3. Rosemary Hills already goes to a “good” school in BCC, but option 3 sends them 10 minutes further to Whitman. To what end?

If the answer is “to raise the FARMS rate at Whitman,” that’s sort of missing the forrest for the trees.


They should necessarily raise farms and remove it from other schools as those schools loose extra funding.


They should do this by punishing the very kids this should purportedly help?


They aren’t helping kids by bussing them across town. Instead strengthen their schools. Give our kids the same opportunities as yours.


Yes, those specific kids already go to BCC and get the desired same opportunities. Why send them 10 minutes farther? Who is that helping?


And the rest of the student population? If DCUM is leaning heavily into "no bussing" and "it's unjust to subject higher-poverty populations to long bus rides" then DCUM needs to get behind making enormously differential funding per stident available so that those same opportunities are offered to all. Only 3 at Northwood interested in AP Econ? A teacher for that would need to be funded if one is funded for the 25 interested at WJ -- as we know, virtual and MC don't provide a similar enough experience.

And that might mean even higher class sizes at Whitman.

And/or higher taxes.

Or the populations can be evened out, but that generally means...bussing.

Pick your poison.


You’re creating a false choice by speaking for the people you’re purportedly trying to help and also making a weird hierarchy of their needs.

In my personal hierarchy (yours may vary), having a safe local school that isp a part of my community is priority #1. Access to AP Econ is maybe priority #250?

To this day, I get a warm feeling whenever I drive by my high school. Do I remember AP Econ? Nope, I remember endless afternoons with my friends on the outdoor basketball court. Afternoons that wouldn’t have been possible if I had to take the bus 45 minutes away.

Do those Northwood kids value AP Econ enough to ride the bus everyday from Wheaton to Whitman and give up those long afternoons? Maybe! But maybe not? I don’t know and neither do you.

If they do, then by all means, let’s pay for it.

That’s why the county sent out this survey.



Do you understand you cannot simply switch schools for a class? And, if you can, please let us know how. We asked and were refused. Mine would gladly ride the bus or we'd drive them. Or, better, how about offering those classes in these kids schools so all kids have equal access.


We have all kinds of middle school students taking HS classes first period then getting bused to the middle school. You can indeed offer a class for one period.


Ask, we asked and were told no. Can they, yes, will they, no.


The person we spoke with in central office said she would arrange it if we wanted, but we couldn't make the transportation work. You definitely need to find the right person to make it happen, but it's a definitely possibility. -DP
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Have heard the businesses at Pike & Rose have seen more kids hanging around after school since NW moved to Woodward


There were no HS students at Woodward prior to NW occupancy and after P&R was built. There were WJ students, but they were another half-mile away and right next door to Wildwood. Now there are more HS students in the area, and closer.

Not sure why you or P&R businesses would expect anything different. It's not as if Bethesda Row is bereft of HS kids hanging around.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Rosemary Hills illustrates the naive cruelty of option 3. Rosemary Hills already goes to a “good” school in BCC, but option 3 sends them 10 minutes further to Whitman. To what end?

If the answer is “to raise the FARMS rate at Whitman,” that’s sort of missing the forrest for the trees.


They should necessarily raise farms and remove it from other schools as those schools loose extra funding.


They should do this by punishing the very kids this should purportedly help?


They aren’t helping kids by bussing them across town. Instead strengthen their schools. Give our kids the same opportunities as yours.


Yes, those specific kids already go to BCC and get the desired same opportunities. Why send them 10 minutes farther? Who is that helping?


And the rest of the student population? If DCUM is leaning heavily into "no bussing" and "it's unjust to subject higher-poverty populations to long bus rides" then DCUM needs to get behind making enormously differential funding per stident available so that those same opportunities are offered to all. Only 3 at Northwood interested in AP Econ? A teacher for that would need to be funded if one is funded for the 25 interested at WJ -- as we know, virtual and MC don't provide a similar enough experience.

And that might mean even higher class sizes at Whitman.

And/or higher taxes.

Or the populations can be evened out, but that generally means...bussing.

Pick your poison.


You’re creating a false choice by speaking for the people you’re purportedly trying to help and also making a weird hierarchy of their needs.

In my personal hierarchy (yours may vary), having a safe local school that isp a part of my community is priority #1. Access to AP Econ is maybe priority #250?

To this day, I get a warm feeling whenever I drive by my high school. Do I remember AP Econ? Nope, I remember endless afternoons with my friends on the outdoor basketball court. Afternoons that wouldn’t have been possible if I had to take the bus 45 minutes away.

Do those Northwood kids value AP Econ enough to ride the bus everyday from Wheaton to Whitman and give up those long afternoons? Maybe! But maybe not? I don’t know and neither do you.

If they do, then by all means, let’s pay for it.

That’s why the county sent out this survey.



Do you understand you cannot simply switch schools for a class? And, if you can, please let us know how. We asked and were refused. Mine would gladly ride the bus or we'd drive them. Or, better, how about offering those classes in these kids schools so all kids have equal access.


We have all kinds of middle school students taking HS classes first period then getting bused to the middle school. You can indeed offer a class for one period.


Ask, we asked and were told no. Can they, yes, will they, no.


The person we spoke with in central office said she would arrange it if we wanted, but we couldn't make the transportation work. You definitely need to find the right person to make it happen, but it's a definitely possibility. -DP


DP. It's possible to hit a putt from the far edge of the green, but much more likely to hit one from inside of 5 feet.

Just because some educational service routinely available when living within one school's catchment is possible to be accessed when living within another does not mean that it is available with reasonable equivalence.

If only those downtrodden would try harder...SMH.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Rosemary Hills illustrates the naive cruelty of option 3. Rosemary Hills already goes to a “good” school in BCC, but option 3 sends them 10 minutes further to Whitman. To what end?

If the answer is “to raise the FARMS rate at Whitman,” that’s sort of missing the forrest for the trees.


They should necessarily raise farms and remove it from other schools as those schools loose extra funding.


They should do this by punishing the very kids this should purportedly help?


They aren’t helping kids by bussing them across town. Instead strengthen their schools. Give our kids the same opportunities as yours.


Yes, those specific kids already go to BCC and get the desired same opportunities. Why send them 10 minutes farther? Who is that helping?


And the rest of the student population? If DCUM is leaning heavily into "no bussing" and "it's unjust to subject higher-poverty populations to long bus rides" then DCUM needs to get behind making enormously differential funding per stident available so that those same opportunities are offered to all. Only 3 at Northwood interested in AP Econ? A teacher for that would need to be funded if one is funded for the 25 interested at WJ -- as we know, virtual and MC don't provide a similar enough experience.

And that might mean even higher class sizes at Whitman.

And/or higher taxes.

Or the populations can be evened out, but that generally means...bussing.

Pick your poison.


You’re creating a false choice by speaking for the people you’re purportedly trying to help and also making a weird hierarchy of their needs.

In my personal hierarchy (yours may vary), having a safe local school that isp a part of my community is priority #1. Access to AP Econ is maybe priority #250?

To this day, I get a warm feeling whenever I drive by my high school. Do I remember AP Econ? Nope, I remember endless afternoons with my friends on the outdoor basketball court. Afternoons that wouldn’t have been possible if I had to take the bus 45 minutes away.

Do those Northwood kids value AP Econ enough to ride the bus everyday from Wheaton to Whitman and give up those long afternoons? Maybe! But maybe not? I don’t know and neither do you.

If they do, then by all means, let’s pay for it.

That’s why the county sent out this survey.



Do you understand you cannot simply switch schools for a class? And, if you can, please let us know how. We asked and were refused. Mine would gladly ride the bus or we'd drive them. Or, better, how about offering those classes in these kids schools so all kids have equal access.


We have all kinds of middle school students taking HS classes first period then getting bused to the middle school. You can indeed offer a class for one period.


Ask, we asked and were told no. Can they, yes, will they, no.


The person we spoke with in central office said she would arrange it if we wanted, but we couldn't make the transportation work. You definitely need to find the right person to make it happen, but it's a definitely possibility. -DP


It can only work if they can fit more kids into the school. Blair and Wheaton are a no.
Anonymous
This is literally the same debate that occurred a few years ago.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:This is literally the same debate that occurred a few years ago.


I suspect they put these out there to distract from all the other nonsense going on. It was insane the amount they spent on this when they scream underfunding.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:This is literally the same debate that occurred a few years ago.


I suspect they put these out there to distract from all the other nonsense going on. It was insane the amount they spent on this when they scream underfunding.


$1.3 million is not a lot of money for something like this, either absolutely or relatively. It’s a mere three one hundredths of 1% of the annual MCPS budget.

Honestly, they should have spent more to get better results. People like to demonize FLO, but things like this take time (which means people who cost money) and resources (more money!).

(And no I don’t work for FLO, my company would have charged more!)
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