Yea that Wheaton person who claims not to live in Wheaton but merely a taxpayer chronically posting about Wheaton High is obnoxious |
| Woodward kind of looks like a prison. They couldn’t have designed it a bit nicer? |
Yeah fiscal responsibility is irritating to have to think about but it is kind of important |
The only possible good move next year would be bringing STEM to Woodward, but that is not going to happen because Wheaton engineering program is successful and well-established. So maybe bringing the literacy magnet to Woodward might help boost it a bit? Given the booming of new residence and commercial centers in North Bethesda, I can't imagine Taylor's recommendation could play on reversing the uprising trend in that area. |
Northwood parent here. It's actually very nice inside. The atrium is lovely and the media center is great. The classrooms are large and well-lit and the hallways are spacious. I wish I'd attended a school that nice (instead I got stuck with old Blair). |
Aren't they finalizing the plan for that in March too? I think Woodward parents should be on them to move arts out of Woodward and move something that is academic (STEM or humanities) into Woodward. |
Don’t worry, he’ll do it regardless of who he hurts, just like he closed the virtual school and other things claiming it was a money issue while he went on a spending spree. |
Sorry you made a bad financial decision and overpaid. Thank goodness some of us didn’t and that’s the bigger issue for you. It’s not going to drop because of Woodward. |
They'll use capacity and facility conditions to identify schools for potential closure, but SSIMS has already been identified and even if they have super high utilization it would never take them off the target list. It will get put up for a vote either way, and do you really think that anybody is going to base their closure vote on whether or not SSIMS has another 150 kids more or fewer? It's all gonna be about politics and whether the politicians who weighed in to say "not now" end up saying "not ever," or if they decide they don't care enough to prioritize fighting to keep it open. |
My issue is with people with no kids in any of the schools affected being vocal about what boundaries should be because of their 'financial decisions'. They should be exposed as such and given zero consideration when making boundary decisions. I moved into the area before the latest boom, like it here and don't plan on going anywhere anytime soon. I do, however, care care if Woodward will turn out to be a good school or not. |
Any taxpayer should be able to comment on the process. The people with financial stake are going to be inclined to ask questions and have opinions. The boundary decision should be able to stand up to the scrutiny. |
The troll will not stop. It’s really sad, but I think it’s pretty obvious, again, just trying to cause division. |
Any taxpayer should be able to comment on the process, but if they are more interested in their property value than the public good of quality education for students, nobody should care. |
Except the people that fund MCPS. Because when property values drop, funding dries up and the school system collapses. |
They clearly care about the quality of education for the school they are zoned to because it plays a factor in the value of the home they’re invested in. |