It's not. It's sociopathic. |
| By the way, they will say they can "just" add more space in Edison next door. Gmafb. They do not have the money for this. |
| I think families are also pushing Wheaton for the advantage of the upper level classes. We were refused a cosa so it surprises me. They should distribute them to other schools and offer equal classes. |
It’s ok as it’s a less wealthy area and the goal is to fix the wealthy areas. Dcc needs another school or two. |
wait so what's the over-capacity percentage at Wheaton in option 2? |
Edison is close but not close enough for the few minutes between classes and that makes no sense. |
Agree that this seems to be a solution that should be explored, at least. Are there vacant buildings that could be repurposed in the relevant area? |
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Anonymous member I did some research:
WHS Capacity: 2,340 So if the “conservative” number of 2,700 is used—WHS is currently 15.38% over capacity. None of these options alleviate our economy overcapacity. In fact, one would increase our capacity by over 500 students. |
I have no idea |
EDISON IS A TRADE SCHOOL. They do not offer Gen Ed classes. WHS partners with them. Edison does not help the overcrowding |
No one wants Kennedy. |
What they are saying is to build more classrooms for Wheaton to use. Yes, we know it’s a trade school. |
Vacant buildings would not work except for just academics. |
Are you a crazy person? Wheaton CANT have the same bell schedule as Edison bc the kids would never make it to class on time. Right now, kids take 10-15 minutes to walk. There is no world in which this would work unless you are going to separate underclassmen from upperclassmen, essentially separating Wheaton into two schools |
Wheaton and Edison are next to each other. They are as close as many portables are to their school buildings. |