WMS does not work because it does not feed to Gunston. Immersion isn't a stand alone program so kids make friends with others at their MS. It makes zero sense to have Immersion students be the only ones to go WMS--> Gunston. It's a non-starter. Cue the posters saying that APS shouldn't consider the welfare of Immersion students because they "chose" the program and therefore deserve to be shat upon. |
Not Gunston, Wakefield. My mistake. |
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Sometimes the simpler solution isn't the best solution. This is one of those times. You seriously need to stop acting like all these kids live at the schools. Look at the neighborhoods they actually live in. Then tell us it's closer for the majority to go to WMS than to Kenmore. |
This doesn't make sense. Nobody feeds from one middle school to another middle school. |
Just saw your correction. Ignore, please. |
Of course they have. You know why? Because "everything" is under consideration and no decision has been made. |
Having sent emails in the past, I call bs that APS is bothering to reply to anyone beyond a form email that says something like "Thank you for your email. We are considering the input received." And then posters are coming on here to say WMS is "being considered." |
+1 yep! |
+1 |
Other option schools entail leaving your middle school cohort and striking out at a new high school. Arlington Tech, IB at WL or YT or WK students, HBW students entering at 9th grade. Immersion would simply be another choice people make that requires a different high school path, only with the added benefit that about 100 students from your middle school (your immersion cohort you have known since kindergarten) will travel with you to Wakefield. Meanwhile, you basically dance with glee at the neighborhood boundary shifts which break up a dozen elementary schools feeding into their neighborhood middle school into two or three middle schools. If neighborhood schools have so little emphasis on alignment, why should an option program rank alignment as a reason they can't move to WMS? The concern that WMS doesn't align with Wakefield is a non-issue, based upon your own lack of concern for neighborhood alignments. |
Well of course, I just meant that just because they haven't officially announced doesn't mean people should not email engage or advocate for what you think is best. |
Those comparisons don't make any sense and are completely apples to oranges. I am in no way "dancing with glee" and neighborhood boundary shifts. I have a kid in neighborhood school. I also am smart enough to know that this isn't a problem caused by immersion and it isn't the responsibility of immersion to fix it. APS needs to address boundaries because of population growth. It is what it is. Immersion shouldn't be the punching bag of Taylor parents. |
So you’re only response to say, apples oranges without actually addressing the facts at hand. You previously said that immersion could not move to WMS because it did not align with Wakefield and I then showed that it is not unusual for option programs to not align, that in fact, moving immersion to kenmore causes more misalignment throughout the system And you respond with fruit and punching bag? Thanks for the spiritied debate. |
Please stop pretending to be so dense. In all of your examples students have the option of staying with their neighborhood cohort (i.e., staying with their friends) or entering an option HS program. They get the choice. This is not the same as your proposal. An immersion student at WMS could not attend Yorktown with their WMS classmates through any standard track (unless they are one of the few immersion students zoned for Yorktown). They are tracked for Gunston or their neighborhood high school (which is Gunston for >1/2 of immersion). They wouldn't get a real choice or the option to choose to stay with MS friends. It's not the same at all and you know that. |