Undocumented kids are eligible for free or reduced lunch, as long as they apply and their family income doesn't exceed the maximum allowed to qualify. Page 27 of the USDA manual re: eligibility has more info about this: http://www.fns.usda.gov/sites/default/files/cn/SP40_CACFP18_SFSP20-2015a.pdf |
Most of the undocumented kids are getting free lunch at Randolph. They are also esol. Lot of stress with those kids. |
| Randolph really isn't the only comparison. Look at Barcorft, Campbell too. And even abingdon. Otherwise you are looking at the most extreme end for scores. Also have to look at advance passage rates. |
| You sound just like the County. We can't compare Nottingham and Randolph/Barcroft/Abingdon? Apples and oranges? This is the DEFINITION of a double standard. And it allows these schools to continue to languish and the disparities in wealth (ie. the segregation in this county) continue to justify mediocrity in results. All our schools should be working towards the same goals. Not one goal for Title I schools and another for the rest. The "advance" pass rates at these schools are appalling. And "advanced" for purposes of SOL is really just mastery of the grade level curriculum--not advanced for your grade level. |
| What about the immersion schools? Folks seem to like them. |
| Immersion would be Claremont. Most people are very happy with that school. Sadly, it's not an option for many. It's basically become a neighborhood school. We moved here 10 years and waited to have kids. At that time we had many options. Now, Claremont of out of bounds for my family. If you are interested you should check out if you are in bounds. |
I'm not sure that this is a like to like comparison. The "non disadantaged kids" category is awfully wide. Presumably it covers kids from families that only just missed the cut off for free and reduced lunches. The parents may be working multiple jobs and probably don't have a lot of education themselves. The category also covers kids from families living in million dollar homes where both parents hold advanced degrees. You are going to have more of the former at Randolph and more of the latter at Nottingham. I am really interested to know if there is a significant difference in outcomes for kids from similar circumstances at Randolph (or any of the other lower performing South Arlington elementaries) versus Nottingham (or any of the other higher performing North Arlington elementaries). In other words, how does a child with parents with advanced degrees and from a million dollar home fare at Randolph? It's possible that there aren't any children in that position zoned for Randolph, but I know for a fact that there are children in that position zoned for Barcroft. Some of those kids actually attend Barcroft; some don't. |
| They fare as well in SOL scores (basic curriculum--which is a very low learning standard for an average to bright elementary student) but not in learning much beyond that because all schools teach to the middle and at those schools the middle is quite different. Your child of parents with advance degrees will do fine at both schools--if "fine" is what you aspire to. You have fewer families at Barcroft and Randolph who have advance degrees, etc. because those parents usually aspire to more than "fine" for their kids. |
Well, if you have a classroom full of kindergarteners who don't speak English at home and a classroom of kindergarteners who do speak English at home and are read to in English frequently, your goals for kindergarten are going to be pretty different for those two classes, aren't they? If you want the goals to be the same, you need those two classes to look more the same. But you'd have to bus some kids south and some kids north, and if they do that through any means other than choice everyone loses their (*&@# minds. |
You do understand that the sfh neighborhood's in south Arlington are filled with well educated successful people right? Do you think those homes are full of blue collar workers now? 30 years ago maybe, but not now. This is such a strange train of thought to me. Low level clerks and office workers can't afford homes in south Arlington. |
| Of course they live there. They just don't send their kids to the neighborhood school. |
Many of the SFH neighborhoods in south Arlington are rental neighborhoods, though, and are "affordable" rentals (since they are small, old, and haven't been rehabbed) so people move around a lot. We live (own) in a SFH neighborhood in 22204 but in the 9 years I've had kids in the schools there have never been the same kids at our bus stop for more than 2 years. When the tear-down activity makes more of a difference you may see that in the schools -- ArlNow featured a new build in south Arlington for $1.3M today (good luck) -- but despite the prevalence of SFHs, the rate of home ownership in 22204 is about half that of 22207. |
There is literally a home across the street from Randolph that sold for 1.2 last year. The ARLNoW home will sell, but this isn't the real estate thread. No need to go into it. |
Just responding to the idea that "sfh neighborhood's in south Arlington are filled with well educated successful people." Yes, there are some, and if these million dollar houses sell there will be more. But the demographics of the neighborhoods that feed into south Arlington schools remain very different from north Arlington schools. If anything, many of the well educated successful people living in south Arlington DON'T have kids and are living where they do because they like Arlington but didn't want to pay the premium for the "better" schools. |
It's clear you have only been to one tiny little area of S. Arlington. It's filled with mostly smaller SFH, some duplexes and some townhomes, some condo buildings and apartment buildings. Most are older, many are in need of repair. The number of well educated successful people buying updated SFH is a small portion of the overall population. |