New boundary study for Churchill, Clarksburg, Damascus, Gaithersburg, RM, Northwest, Poolesville, QO, SV, WM, Wootton

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Anonymous wrote:FARMS kids do not do better when they are bused.

That said, every child deserves to have fair access to a quality education. It looks bad when they have one school with a 1300 average SAT and one with a 950 SAT. But the kids with a 950 SAT would still score the same even if they moved to the 1300 average SAT school and vice versa.

I am a strong believer in the school within a school mindset that allows the ones that want to learn a separate peer group for their core classes.

People want stability in their schools. I hope the BOE doesn't go on a crusade to move kids around just because it's the "in thing to do"



Kids from poor families actually do do better when they attend low-poverty vs. high-poverty schools.

People are against change, period. But you can't have boundary changes without change.


This. The higher the poverty rate, the lower the performance. These need to be reduced:

SVHS- 49.9%
Gaithersburg- 57.6%
Watkins Mill- 64.4%

Seneca Valley High: 2023 Hispanic chronic absenteeism rate 51.0%:
https://reportcard.msde.maryland.gov/Graphs/#/Demographics/ChronicAbsenteeism/3/99/1/6/15/0104/2023

Gaithersburg High: 2023 Hispanic chronic absenteeism rate 55.0%:
https://reportcard.msde.maryland.gov/Graphs/#/Demographics/ChronicAbsenteeism/3/99/1/6/15/0551/2023

Watkins Mills High: 2023 Hispanic chronic absenteeism rate 58.9%:
https://reportcard.msde.maryland.gov/Graphs/#/Demographics/ChronicAbsenteeism/3/99/1/6/15/0545/2023

When you move chronically absent students to a school farther away, will they suddenly show up for school?




No they won't, but the concern extends beyond them. In some ways, they're going to do what they want to do. It's really more about the ripple effect throughout the entire school. When a huge portion of the student body is plagued by chronic absenteeism the impact to the school is profound. For example, using Watkins Mills numbers- 1,715 students, 616 are chronically absent. Imagine what that does to the school. Teachers now have to dedicate significant time to help the absent students catch up, which disrupts classroom dynamics and affects the experience of the kids who consistently go to school and do want to learn. There's a high number of students who are disengaged and a high number of disciplinary issues. There's probably limited clubs and programs compared to the other schools that don't have this problem because the demand is low. There's probably very little to no school spirit. Very low parental engagement. A sense of apathy among a large number of students and staff. Higher than normal teacher turnover rates. What you end up with is a negative school culture that is not an ideal environment for learning. This is what MCPS cares about and why demographics is a big factor in boundary studies.


You move these kids to other schools so each school having 10-15% chronically absent is still causing issues, and more schools will have low moral. Possibly more Hispanic students will be absent due to the distance. The people who care about education will not accept their kids being bussed to poor performing schools so they will leave or go to private schools. Then none of the schools will be ideal environment for learning. It’s a lose lose situation. Seriously this is a problem that busing cannot solve.

In fact, Hispanic organizations have surveyed Hispanic students in MCPS and found that many immigrant Hispanic students don't go to school because they were poorly educated in their home countries and could not keep up with their grade-level work. You cannot solve this problem by bussing.


Again, the issue isn't so much the kids who don't want to go to school. I agree we can't fix that. The significant issue is the ripple effect that having a large number of chronically absent kids have on a school and the resulting environment that it causes. It negatively impacts the other students, the staff, and the overall culture of the school.


Again this problem is not solvable by bussing. Bussing will only make the ripple effect in a few schools be extended to more schools.


MCPS buses over 100,000 students, twice a day. This boundary study will almost certainly reduce busing by reassigning students in potential walk zones.


+1. All the kids who live near Crown who currently take the bus to Gaithersburg or Wootton will become walkers. That's a good thing.


Name a neighborhood in wootton that’s actually walkable to crown?


Most obviously: the Washingtonian area, which is literally across Fields Road from the Crown HS site.

https://gis.mcpsmd.org/ServiceAreaMaps/WoottonHS.pdf

There are also some areas south of 28 that look like they're within 2.0 miles walking distance of the Crown HS site, some of which are also within walking distance of Wootton.


South of 28 is really not walkable to crown. There may be some houses just within 2 miles but not the entire neighborhood so still need bus for the neighborhood.


Some of it is.


It's going to depend on how the MCPS transportation department determines the walk zone for Crown. If they don't think it's safe for students to cross 28, or Shady Grove, or Sam Eig, then they will remain bus riders even if less than 2 miles away from Crown.


Definitely not safe to walk 2 miles on highway 28 and cross it everyday for students.


28 isn't less safe than Georgia Ave, or Veirs Mill, or University, or Connecticut, or 355. MCPS expects high school students to walk along and cross those roads. MCPS even expects middle school students to walk along and cross those roads. So why not 28, too?


QO students cross 28 all the time.


Huh? Have you even been to QO? Crossing 28 at QO is nothing like crossing 270 or 370; or even 355 for that matter. Get real.

There's no way KF should go to Crown. There's only one way a kid can walk home from Crown to Kings Farm or College Gardens, and that's 40 minutes using the Shady Grove / 270 overpass. If there's ice or an emergency - not safe at all.


I don't think anyone was saying the KF kids should walk to Crown. The point was some kids on the west side of 270 but south of 28 could cross 28 and walk to Crown.


That’s really insane. I bet nobody in that area would walk if they’re rezoned to crown. Only driving could work which would will just cause traffic congestion.


No one from King Farm is walking to RM either...


Of course, King farm is more than 2 miles away from RM.

Anyway, expecting kids to walk 2 miles each way is unreasonable too. It really should be reduced to 1 mile.


No, Kings Farm is within a 2 mile radius of Crown. It's 2.5 miles by walking, bicycle or car; which is why it's looks longer in Google.

You missed the point - it's dangerous and kids might be encouraged to bike or walk - especially if they hang out at Rio at night after school.

But if you dont think that could ever happen and kids are wise enough never to walk up Omega Drive to cross the bridge heading home, nothing I can really say.


MCPS uses walking distance, not radius.


I wonder how they determine the walking route. Google map sometimes give shorter walking route but has to walk through some weird private paths which are not paved roads


In the 20 years I've been using Google Maps for finding walkable routes I haven't seen that yet.


DP. It's a thing. For example, try the Google Maps walking route between MLK M.S. and Waters Landing E.S. in Germantown.


^^^though I wouldn't call them "weird" private paths, they're just plain paved paths.


Google map shows me some short cuts through grass area right next to people’s backyards, which are only walkable when it is dry.
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Anonymous wrote:FARMS kids do not do better when they are bused.

That said, every child deserves to have fair access to a quality education. It looks bad when they have one school with a 1300 average SAT and one with a 950 SAT. But the kids with a 950 SAT would still score the same even if they moved to the 1300 average SAT school and vice versa.

I am a strong believer in the school within a school mindset that allows the ones that want to learn a separate peer group for their core classes.

People want stability in their schools. I hope the BOE doesn't go on a crusade to move kids around just because it's the "in thing to do"



Kids from poor families actually do do better when they attend low-poverty vs. high-poverty schools.

People are against change, period. But you can't have boundary changes without change.


This. The higher the poverty rate, the lower the performance. These need to be reduced:

SVHS- 49.9%
Gaithersburg- 57.6%
Watkins Mill- 64.4%

Seneca Valley High: 2023 Hispanic chronic absenteeism rate 51.0%:
https://reportcard.msde.maryland.gov/Graphs/#/Demographics/ChronicAbsenteeism/3/99/1/6/15/0104/2023

Gaithersburg High: 2023 Hispanic chronic absenteeism rate 55.0%:
https://reportcard.msde.maryland.gov/Graphs/#/Demographics/ChronicAbsenteeism/3/99/1/6/15/0551/2023

Watkins Mills High: 2023 Hispanic chronic absenteeism rate 58.9%:
https://reportcard.msde.maryland.gov/Graphs/#/Demographics/ChronicAbsenteeism/3/99/1/6/15/0545/2023

When you move chronically absent students to a school farther away, will they suddenly show up for school?




No they won't, but the concern extends beyond them. In some ways, they're going to do what they want to do. It's really more about the ripple effect throughout the entire school. When a huge portion of the student body is plagued by chronic absenteeism the impact to the school is profound. For example, using Watkins Mills numbers- 1,715 students, 616 are chronically absent. Imagine what that does to the school. Teachers now have to dedicate significant time to help the absent students catch up, which disrupts classroom dynamics and affects the experience of the kids who consistently go to school and do want to learn. There's a high number of students who are disengaged and a high number of disciplinary issues. There's probably limited clubs and programs compared to the other schools that don't have this problem because the demand is low. There's probably very little to no school spirit. Very low parental engagement. A sense of apathy among a large number of students and staff. Higher than normal teacher turnover rates. What you end up with is a negative school culture that is not an ideal environment for learning. This is what MCPS cares about and why demographics is a big factor in boundary studies.


You move these kids to other schools so each school having 10-15% chronically absent is still causing issues, and more schools will have low moral. Possibly more Hispanic students will be absent due to the distance. The people who care about education will not accept their kids being bussed to poor performing schools so they will leave or go to private schools. Then none of the schools will be ideal environment for learning. It’s a lose lose situation. Seriously this is a problem that busing cannot solve.

In fact, Hispanic organizations have surveyed Hispanic students in MCPS and found that many immigrant Hispanic students don't go to school because they were poorly educated in their home countries and could not keep up with their grade-level work. You cannot solve this problem by bussing.


Again, the issue isn't so much the kids who don't want to go to school. I agree we can't fix that. The significant issue is the ripple effect that having a large number of chronically absent kids have on a school and the resulting environment that it causes. It negatively impacts the other students, the staff, and the overall culture of the school.


Again this problem is not solvable by bussing. Bussing will only make the ripple effect in a few schools be extended to more schools.


MCPS buses over 100,000 students, twice a day. This boundary study will almost certainly reduce busing by reassigning students in potential walk zones.


+1. All the kids who live near Crown who currently take the bus to Gaithersburg or Wootton will become walkers. That's a good thing.


Name a neighborhood in wootton that’s actually walkable to crown?


Most obviously: the Washingtonian area, which is literally across Fields Road from the Crown HS site.

https://gis.mcpsmd.org/ServiceAreaMaps/WoottonHS.pdf

There are also some areas south of 28 that look like they're within 2.0 miles walking distance of the Crown HS site, some of which are also within walking distance of Wootton.


South of 28 is really not walkable to crown. There may be some houses just within 2 miles but not the entire neighborhood so still need bus for the neighborhood.


Some of it is.


It's going to depend on how the MCPS transportation department determines the walk zone for Crown. If they don't think it's safe for students to cross 28, or Shady Grove, or Sam Eig, then they will remain bus riders even if less than 2 miles away from Crown.


Definitely not safe to walk 2 miles on highway 28 and cross it everyday for students.


28 isn't less safe than Georgia Ave, or Veirs Mill, or University, or Connecticut, or 355. MCPS expects high school students to walk along and cross those roads. MCPS even expects middle school students to walk along and cross those roads. So why not 28, too?


QO students cross 28 all the time.


Huh? Have you even been to QO? Crossing 28 at QO is nothing like crossing 270 or 370; or even 355 for that matter. Get real.

There's no way KF should go to Crown. There's only one way a kid can walk home from Crown to Kings Farm or College Gardens, and that's 40 minutes using the Shady Grove / 270 overpass. If there's ice or an emergency - not safe at all.


I don't think anyone was saying the KF kids should walk to Crown. The point was some kids on the west side of 270 but south of 28 could cross 28 and walk to Crown.


That’s really insane. I bet nobody in that area would walk if they’re rezoned to crown. Only driving could work which would will just cause traffic congestion.


No one from King Farm is walking to RM either...


Of course, King farm is more than 2 miles away from RM.

Anyway, expecting kids to walk 2 miles each way is unreasonable too. It really should be reduced to 1 mile.


No, Kings Farm is within a 2 mile radius of Crown. It's 2.5 miles by walking, bicycle or car; which is why it's looks longer in Google.

You missed the point - it's dangerous and kids might be encouraged to bike or walk - especially if they hang out at Rio at night after school.

But if you dont think that could ever happen and kids are wise enough never to walk up Omega Drive to cross the bridge heading home, nothing I can really say.


MCPS uses walking distance, not radius.


I wonder how they determine the walking route. Google map sometimes give shorter walking route but has to walk through some weird private paths which are not paved roads


In the 20 years I've been using Google Maps for finding walkable routes I haven't seen that yet.


DP. It's a thing. For example, try the Google Maps walking route between MLK M.S. and Waters Landing E.S. in Germantown.


^^^though I wouldn't call them "weird" private paths, they're just plain paved paths.


Google map shows me some short cuts through grass area right next to people’s backyards, which are only walkable when it is dry.


Could you give an example? I have never seen that.
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Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:FARMS kids do not do better when they are bused.

That said, every child deserves to have fair access to a quality education. It looks bad when they have one school with a 1300 average SAT and one with a 950 SAT. But the kids with a 950 SAT would still score the same even if they moved to the 1300 average SAT school and vice versa.

I am a strong believer in the school within a school mindset that allows the ones that want to learn a separate peer group for their core classes.

People want stability in their schools. I hope the BOE doesn't go on a crusade to move kids around just because it's the "in thing to do"



Kids from poor families actually do do better when they attend low-poverty vs. high-poverty schools.

People are against change, period. But you can't have boundary changes without change.


This. The higher the poverty rate, the lower the performance. These need to be reduced:

SVHS- 49.9%
Gaithersburg- 57.6%
Watkins Mill- 64.4%

Seneca Valley High: 2023 Hispanic chronic absenteeism rate 51.0%:
https://reportcard.msde.maryland.gov/Graphs/#/Demographics/ChronicAbsenteeism/3/99/1/6/15/0104/2023

Gaithersburg High: 2023 Hispanic chronic absenteeism rate 55.0%:
https://reportcard.msde.maryland.gov/Graphs/#/Demographics/ChronicAbsenteeism/3/99/1/6/15/0551/2023

Watkins Mills High: 2023 Hispanic chronic absenteeism rate 58.9%:
https://reportcard.msde.maryland.gov/Graphs/#/Demographics/ChronicAbsenteeism/3/99/1/6/15/0545/2023

When you move chronically absent students to a school farther away, will they suddenly show up for school?




No they won't, but the concern extends beyond them. In some ways, they're going to do what they want to do. It's really more about the ripple effect throughout the entire school. When a huge portion of the student body is plagued by chronic absenteeism the impact to the school is profound. For example, using Watkins Mills numbers- 1,715 students, 616 are chronically absent. Imagine what that does to the school. Teachers now have to dedicate significant time to help the absent students catch up, which disrupts classroom dynamics and affects the experience of the kids who consistently go to school and do want to learn. There's a high number of students who are disengaged and a high number of disciplinary issues. There's probably limited clubs and programs compared to the other schools that don't have this problem because the demand is low. There's probably very little to no school spirit. Very low parental engagement. A sense of apathy among a large number of students and staff. Higher than normal teacher turnover rates. What you end up with is a negative school culture that is not an ideal environment for learning. This is what MCPS cares about and why demographics is a big factor in boundary studies.


You move these kids to other schools so each school having 10-15% chronically absent is still causing issues, and more schools will have low moral. Possibly more Hispanic students will be absent due to the distance. The people who care about education will not accept their kids being bussed to poor performing schools so they will leave or go to private schools. Then none of the schools will be ideal environment for learning. It’s a lose lose situation. Seriously this is a problem that busing cannot solve.

In fact, Hispanic organizations have surveyed Hispanic students in MCPS and found that many immigrant Hispanic students don't go to school because they were poorly educated in their home countries and could not keep up with their grade-level work. You cannot solve this problem by bussing.


Again, the issue isn't so much the kids who don't want to go to school. I agree we can't fix that. The significant issue is the ripple effect that having a large number of chronically absent kids have on a school and the resulting environment that it causes. It negatively impacts the other students, the staff, and the overall culture of the school.


Again this problem is not solvable by bussing. Bussing will only make the ripple effect in a few schools be extended to more schools.


MCPS buses over 100,000 students, twice a day. This boundary study will almost certainly reduce busing by reassigning students in potential walk zones.


+1. All the kids who live near Crown who currently take the bus to Gaithersburg or Wootton will become walkers. That's a good thing.


Name a neighborhood in wootton that’s actually walkable to crown?


Most obviously: the Washingtonian area, which is literally across Fields Road from the Crown HS site.

https://gis.mcpsmd.org/ServiceAreaMaps/WoottonHS.pdf

There are also some areas south of 28 that look like they're within 2.0 miles walking distance of the Crown HS site, some of which are also within walking distance of Wootton.


South of 28 is really not walkable to crown. There may be some houses just within 2 miles but not the entire neighborhood so still need bus for the neighborhood.


Some of it is.


It's going to depend on how the MCPS transportation department determines the walk zone for Crown. If they don't think it's safe for students to cross 28, or Shady Grove, or Sam Eig, then they will remain bus riders even if less than 2 miles away from Crown.


Definitely not safe to walk 2 miles on highway 28 and cross it everyday for students.


28 isn't less safe than Georgia Ave, or Veirs Mill, or University, or Connecticut, or 355. MCPS expects high school students to walk along and cross those roads. MCPS even expects middle school students to walk along and cross those roads. So why not 28, too?


QO students cross 28 all the time.


Huh? Have you even been to QO? Crossing 28 at QO is nothing like crossing 270 or 370; or even 355 for that matter. Get real.

There's no way KF should go to Crown. There's only one way a kid can walk home from Crown to Kings Farm or College Gardens, and that's 40 minutes using the Shady Grove / 270 overpass. If there's ice or an emergency - not safe at all.


I don't think anyone was saying the KF kids should walk to Crown. The point was some kids on the west side of 270 but south of 28 could cross 28 and walk to Crown.


That’s really insane. I bet nobody in that area would walk if they’re rezoned to crown. Only driving could work which would will just cause traffic congestion.


No one from King Farm is walking to RM either...


Of course, King farm is more than 2 miles away from RM.

Anyway, expecting kids to walk 2 miles each way is unreasonable too. It really should be reduced to 1 mile.


No, Kings Farm is within a 2 mile radius of Crown. It's 2.5 miles by walking, bicycle or car; which is why it's looks longer in Google.

You missed the point - it's dangerous and kids might be encouraged to bike or walk - especially if they hang out at Rio at night after school.

But if you dont think that could ever happen and kids are wise enough never to walk up Omega Drive to cross the bridge heading home, nothing I can really say.


MCPS uses walking distance, not radius.


I wonder how they determine the walking route. Google map sometimes give shorter walking route but has to walk through some weird private paths which are not paved roads


In the 20 years I've been using Google Maps for finding walkable routes I haven't seen that yet.


DP. It's a thing. For example, try the Google Maps walking route between MLK M.S. and Waters Landing E.S. in Germantown.


^^^though I wouldn't call them "weird" private paths, they're just plain paved paths.


Google map shows me some short cuts through grass area right next to people’s backyards, which are only walkable when it is dry.


Could you give an example? I have never seen that.


Of course not, I'm making excuses as to why we can't change the status quo.
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Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:FARMS kids do not do better when they are bused.

That said, every child deserves to have fair access to a quality education. It looks bad when they have one school with a 1300 average SAT and one with a 950 SAT. But the kids with a 950 SAT would still score the same even if they moved to the 1300 average SAT school and vice versa.

I am a strong believer in the school within a school mindset that allows the ones that want to learn a separate peer group for their core classes.

People want stability in their schools. I hope the BOE doesn't go on a crusade to move kids around just because it's the "in thing to do"



Kids from poor families actually do do better when they attend low-poverty vs. high-poverty schools.

People are against change, period. But you can't have boundary changes without change.


This. The higher the poverty rate, the lower the performance. These need to be reduced:

SVHS- 49.9%
Gaithersburg- 57.6%
Watkins Mill- 64.4%

Seneca Valley High: 2023 Hispanic chronic absenteeism rate 51.0%:
https://reportcard.msde.maryland.gov/Graphs/#/Demographics/ChronicAbsenteeism/3/99/1/6/15/0104/2023

Gaithersburg High: 2023 Hispanic chronic absenteeism rate 55.0%:
https://reportcard.msde.maryland.gov/Graphs/#/Demographics/ChronicAbsenteeism/3/99/1/6/15/0551/2023

Watkins Mills High: 2023 Hispanic chronic absenteeism rate 58.9%:
https://reportcard.msde.maryland.gov/Graphs/#/Demographics/ChronicAbsenteeism/3/99/1/6/15/0545/2023

When you move chronically absent students to a school farther away, will they suddenly show up for school?




No they won't, but the concern extends beyond them. In some ways, they're going to do what they want to do. It's really more about the ripple effect throughout the entire school. When a huge portion of the student body is plagued by chronic absenteeism the impact to the school is profound. For example, using Watkins Mills numbers- 1,715 students, 616 are chronically absent. Imagine what that does to the school. Teachers now have to dedicate significant time to help the absent students catch up, which disrupts classroom dynamics and affects the experience of the kids who consistently go to school and do want to learn. There's a high number of students who are disengaged and a high number of disciplinary issues. There's probably limited clubs and programs compared to the other schools that don't have this problem because the demand is low. There's probably very little to no school spirit. Very low parental engagement. A sense of apathy among a large number of students and staff. Higher than normal teacher turnover rates. What you end up with is a negative school culture that is not an ideal environment for learning. This is what MCPS cares about and why demographics is a big factor in boundary studies.


You move these kids to other schools so each school having 10-15% chronically absent is still causing issues, and more schools will have low moral. Possibly more Hispanic students will be absent due to the distance. The people who care about education will not accept their kids being bussed to poor performing schools so they will leave or go to private schools. Then none of the schools will be ideal environment for learning. It’s a lose lose situation. Seriously this is a problem that busing cannot solve.

In fact, Hispanic organizations have surveyed Hispanic students in MCPS and found that many immigrant Hispanic students don't go to school because they were poorly educated in their home countries and could not keep up with their grade-level work. You cannot solve this problem by bussing.


Again, the issue isn't so much the kids who don't want to go to school. I agree we can't fix that. The significant issue is the ripple effect that having a large number of chronically absent kids have on a school and the resulting environment that it causes. It negatively impacts the other students, the staff, and the overall culture of the school.


Again this problem is not solvable by bussing. Bussing will only make the ripple effect in a few schools be extended to more schools.


MCPS buses over 100,000 students, twice a day. This boundary study will almost certainly reduce busing by reassigning students in potential walk zones.


+1. All the kids who live near Crown who currently take the bus to Gaithersburg or Wootton will become walkers. That's a good thing.


Name a neighborhood in wootton that’s actually walkable to crown?


Most obviously: the Washingtonian area, which is literally across Fields Road from the Crown HS site.

https://gis.mcpsmd.org/ServiceAreaMaps/WoottonHS.pdf

There are also some areas south of 28 that look like they're within 2.0 miles walking distance of the Crown HS site, some of which are also within walking distance of Wootton.


South of 28 is really not walkable to crown. There may be some houses just within 2 miles but not the entire neighborhood so still need bus for the neighborhood.


Some of it is.


It's going to depend on how the MCPS transportation department determines the walk zone for Crown. If they don't think it's safe for students to cross 28, or Shady Grove, or Sam Eig, then they will remain bus riders even if less than 2 miles away from Crown.


Definitely not safe to walk 2 miles on highway 28 and cross it everyday for students.


28 isn't less safe than Georgia Ave, or Veirs Mill, or University, or Connecticut, or 355. MCPS expects high school students to walk along and cross those roads. MCPS even expects middle school students to walk along and cross those roads. So why not 28, too?


QO students cross 28 all the time.


Huh? Have you even been to QO? Crossing 28 at QO is nothing like crossing 270 or 370; or even 355 for that matter. Get real.

There's no way KF should go to Crown. There's only one way a kid can walk home from Crown to Kings Farm or College Gardens, and that's 40 minutes using the Shady Grove / 270 overpass. If there's ice or an emergency - not safe at all.


I don't think anyone was saying the KF kids should walk to Crown. The point was some kids on the west side of 270 but south of 28 could cross 28 and walk to Crown.


That’s really insane. I bet nobody in that area would walk if they’re rezoned to crown. Only driving could work which would will just cause traffic congestion.


No one from King Farm is walking to RM either...


Of course, King farm is more than 2 miles away from RM.

Anyway, expecting kids to walk 2 miles each way is unreasonable too. It really should be reduced to 1 mile.


No, Kings Farm is within a 2 mile radius of Crown. It's 2.5 miles by walking, bicycle or car; which is why it's looks longer in Google.

You missed the point - it's dangerous and kids might be encouraged to bike or walk - especially if they hang out at Rio at night after school.

But if you dont think that could ever happen and kids are wise enough never to walk up Omega Drive to cross the bridge heading home, nothing I can really say.


MCPS uses walking distance, not radius.


I wonder how they determine the walking route. Google map sometimes give shorter walking route but has to walk through some weird private paths which are not paved roads


In the 20 years I've been using Google Maps for finding walkable routes I haven't seen that yet.


DP. It's a thing. For example, try the Google Maps walking route between MLK M.S. and Waters Landing E.S. in Germantown.


^^^though I wouldn't call them "weird" private paths, they're just plain paved paths.


Google map shows me some short cuts through grass area right next to people’s backyards, which are only walkable when it is dry.


Could you give an example? I have never seen that.


Of course not, I'm making excuses as to why we can't change the status quo.


It’s not about boundary change. Just curious how mcps determines walking route. We’re 1.8-1.9 miles to a high school through private path but if taking public roads it would be 2.2 miles.
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Anonymous wrote:FARMS kids do not do better when they are bused.

That said, every child deserves to have fair access to a quality education. It looks bad when they have one school with a 1300 average SAT and one with a 950 SAT. But the kids with a 950 SAT would still score the same even if they moved to the 1300 average SAT school and vice versa.

I am a strong believer in the school within a school mindset that allows the ones that want to learn a separate peer group for their core classes.

People want stability in their schools. I hope the BOE doesn't go on a crusade to move kids around just because it's the "in thing to do"



Kids from poor families actually do do better when they attend low-poverty vs. high-poverty schools.

People are against change, period. But you can't have boundary changes without change.


This. The higher the poverty rate, the lower the performance. These need to be reduced:

SVHS- 49.9%
Gaithersburg- 57.6%
Watkins Mill- 64.4%

Seneca Valley High: 2023 Hispanic chronic absenteeism rate 51.0%:
https://reportcard.msde.maryland.gov/Graphs/#/Demographics/ChronicAbsenteeism/3/99/1/6/15/0104/2023

Gaithersburg High: 2023 Hispanic chronic absenteeism rate 55.0%:
https://reportcard.msde.maryland.gov/Graphs/#/Demographics/ChronicAbsenteeism/3/99/1/6/15/0551/2023

Watkins Mills High: 2023 Hispanic chronic absenteeism rate 58.9%:
https://reportcard.msde.maryland.gov/Graphs/#/Demographics/ChronicAbsenteeism/3/99/1/6/15/0545/2023

When you move chronically absent students to a school farther away, will they suddenly show up for school?




No they won't, but the concern extends beyond them. In some ways, they're going to do what they want to do. It's really more about the ripple effect throughout the entire school. When a huge portion of the student body is plagued by chronic absenteeism the impact to the school is profound. For example, using Watkins Mills numbers- 1,715 students, 616 are chronically absent. Imagine what that does to the school. Teachers now have to dedicate significant time to help the absent students catch up, which disrupts classroom dynamics and affects the experience of the kids who consistently go to school and do want to learn. There's a high number of students who are disengaged and a high number of disciplinary issues. There's probably limited clubs and programs compared to the other schools that don't have this problem because the demand is low. There's probably very little to no school spirit. Very low parental engagement. A sense of apathy among a large number of students and staff. Higher than normal teacher turnover rates. What you end up with is a negative school culture that is not an ideal environment for learning. This is what MCPS cares about and why demographics is a big factor in boundary studies.


You move these kids to other schools so each school having 10-15% chronically absent is still causing issues, and more schools will have low moral. Possibly more Hispanic students will be absent due to the distance. The people who care about education will not accept their kids being bussed to poor performing schools so they will leave or go to private schools. Then none of the schools will be ideal environment for learning. It’s a lose lose situation. Seriously this is a problem that busing cannot solve.

In fact, Hispanic organizations have surveyed Hispanic students in MCPS and found that many immigrant Hispanic students don't go to school because they were poorly educated in their home countries and could not keep up with their grade-level work. You cannot solve this problem by bussing.


Again, the issue isn't so much the kids who don't want to go to school. I agree we can't fix that. The significant issue is the ripple effect that having a large number of chronically absent kids have on a school and the resulting environment that it causes. It negatively impacts the other students, the staff, and the overall culture of the school.


Again this problem is not solvable by bussing. Bussing will only make the ripple effect in a few schools be extended to more schools.


MCPS buses over 100,000 students, twice a day. This boundary study will almost certainly reduce busing by reassigning students in potential walk zones.


+1. All the kids who live near Crown who currently take the bus to Gaithersburg or Wootton will become walkers. That's a good thing.


Name a neighborhood in wootton that’s actually walkable to crown?


Most obviously: the Washingtonian area, which is literally across Fields Road from the Crown HS site.

https://gis.mcpsmd.org/ServiceAreaMaps/WoottonHS.pdf

There are also some areas south of 28 that look like they're within 2.0 miles walking distance of the Crown HS site, some of which are also within walking distance of Wootton.


South of 28 is really not walkable to crown. There may be some houses just within 2 miles but not the entire neighborhood so still need bus for the neighborhood.


Some of it is.


It's going to depend on how the MCPS transportation department determines the walk zone for Crown. If they don't think it's safe for students to cross 28, or Shady Grove, or Sam Eig, then they will remain bus riders even if less than 2 miles away from Crown.


Definitely not safe to walk 2 miles on highway 28 and cross it everyday for students.


28 isn't less safe than Georgia Ave, or Veirs Mill, or University, or Connecticut, or 355. MCPS expects high school students to walk along and cross those roads. MCPS even expects middle school students to walk along and cross those roads. So why not 28, too?


QO students cross 28 all the time.


Huh? Have you even been to QO? Crossing 28 at QO is nothing like crossing 270 or 370; or even 355 for that matter. Get real.

There's no way KF should go to Crown. There's only one way a kid can walk home from Crown to Kings Farm or College Gardens, and that's 40 minutes using the Shady Grove / 270 overpass. If there's ice or an emergency - not safe at all.


I don't think anyone was saying the KF kids should walk to Crown. The point was some kids on the west side of 270 but south of 28 could cross 28 and walk to Crown.


That’s really insane. I bet nobody in that area would walk if they’re rezoned to crown. Only driving could work which would will just cause traffic congestion.


No one from King Farm is walking to RM either...


Of course, King farm is more than 2 miles away from RM.

Anyway, expecting kids to walk 2 miles each way is unreasonable too. It really should be reduced to 1 mile.


No, Kings Farm is within a 2 mile radius of Crown. It's 2.5 miles by walking, bicycle or car; which is why it's looks longer in Google.

You missed the point - it's dangerous and kids might be encouraged to bike or walk - especially if they hang out at Rio at night after school.

But if you dont think that could ever happen and kids are wise enough never to walk up Omega Drive to cross the bridge heading home, nothing I can really say.


MCPS uses walking distance, not radius.


I wonder how they determine the walking route. Google map sometimes give shorter walking route but has to walk through some weird private paths which are not paved roads


In the 20 years I've been using Google Maps for finding walkable routes I haven't seen that yet.


DP. It's a thing. For example, try the Google Maps walking route between MLK M.S. and Waters Landing E.S. in Germantown.


^^^though I wouldn't call them "weird" private paths, they're just plain paved paths.


Google map shows me some short cuts through grass area right next to people’s backyards, which are only walkable when it is dry.


Could you give an example? I have never seen that.


Of course not, I'm making excuses as to why we can't change the status quo.


It’s not about boundary change. Just curious how mcps determines walking route. We’re 1.8-1.9 miles to a high school through private path but if taking public roads it would be 2.2 miles.

What do you mean by "private path"? For example, the paths in Montgomery Village are owned by the Montgomery Village corporations, so in that sense they're in private ownership, but they're public paths.
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Anonymous wrote:FARMS kids do not do better when they are bused.

That said, every child deserves to have fair access to a quality education. It looks bad when they have one school with a 1300 average SAT and one with a 950 SAT. But the kids with a 950 SAT would still score the same even if they moved to the 1300 average SAT school and vice versa.

I am a strong believer in the school within a school mindset that allows the ones that want to learn a separate peer group for their core classes.

People want stability in their schools. I hope the BOE doesn't go on a crusade to move kids around just because it's the "in thing to do"



Kids from poor families actually do do better when they attend low-poverty vs. high-poverty schools.

People are against change, period. But you can't have boundary changes without change.


This. The higher the poverty rate, the lower the performance. These need to be reduced:

SVHS- 49.9%
Gaithersburg- 57.6%
Watkins Mill- 64.4%

Seneca Valley High: 2023 Hispanic chronic absenteeism rate 51.0%:
https://reportcard.msde.maryland.gov/Graphs/#/Demographics/ChronicAbsenteeism/3/99/1/6/15/0104/2023

Gaithersburg High: 2023 Hispanic chronic absenteeism rate 55.0%:
https://reportcard.msde.maryland.gov/Graphs/#/Demographics/ChronicAbsenteeism/3/99/1/6/15/0551/2023

Watkins Mills High: 2023 Hispanic chronic absenteeism rate 58.9%:
https://reportcard.msde.maryland.gov/Graphs/#/Demographics/ChronicAbsenteeism/3/99/1/6/15/0545/2023

When you move chronically absent students to a school farther away, will they suddenly show up for school?




No they won't, but the concern extends beyond them. In some ways, they're going to do what they want to do. It's really more about the ripple effect throughout the entire school. When a huge portion of the student body is plagued by chronic absenteeism the impact to the school is profound. For example, using Watkins Mills numbers- 1,715 students, 616 are chronically absent. Imagine what that does to the school. Teachers now have to dedicate significant time to help the absent students catch up, which disrupts classroom dynamics and affects the experience of the kids who consistently go to school and do want to learn. There's a high number of students who are disengaged and a high number of disciplinary issues. There's probably limited clubs and programs compared to the other schools that don't have this problem because the demand is low. There's probably very little to no school spirit. Very low parental engagement. A sense of apathy among a large number of students and staff. Higher than normal teacher turnover rates. What you end up with is a negative school culture that is not an ideal environment for learning. This is what MCPS cares about and why demographics is a big factor in boundary studies.


You move these kids to other schools so each school having 10-15% chronically absent is still causing issues, and more schools will have low moral. Possibly more Hispanic students will be absent due to the distance. The people who care about education will not accept their kids being bussed to poor performing schools so they will leave or go to private schools. Then none of the schools will be ideal environment for learning. It’s a lose lose situation. Seriously this is a problem that busing cannot solve.

In fact, Hispanic organizations have surveyed Hispanic students in MCPS and found that many immigrant Hispanic students don't go to school because they were poorly educated in their home countries and could not keep up with their grade-level work. You cannot solve this problem by bussing.


Again, the issue isn't so much the kids who don't want to go to school. I agree we can't fix that. The significant issue is the ripple effect that having a large number of chronically absent kids have on a school and the resulting environment that it causes. It negatively impacts the other students, the staff, and the overall culture of the school.


Again this problem is not solvable by bussing. Bussing will only make the ripple effect in a few schools be extended to more schools.


MCPS buses over 100,000 students, twice a day. This boundary study will almost certainly reduce busing by reassigning students in potential walk zones.


+1. All the kids who live near Crown who currently take the bus to Gaithersburg or Wootton will become walkers. That's a good thing.


Name a neighborhood in wootton that’s actually walkable to crown?


Most obviously: the Washingtonian area, which is literally across Fields Road from the Crown HS site.

https://gis.mcpsmd.org/ServiceAreaMaps/WoottonHS.pdf

There are also some areas south of 28 that look like they're within 2.0 miles walking distance of the Crown HS site, some of which are also within walking distance of Wootton.


South of 28 is really not walkable to crown. There may be some houses just within 2 miles but not the entire neighborhood so still need bus for the neighborhood.


Some of it is.


It's going to depend on how the MCPS transportation department determines the walk zone for Crown. If they don't think it's safe for students to cross 28, or Shady Grove, or Sam Eig, then they will remain bus riders even if less than 2 miles away from Crown.


Definitely not safe to walk 2 miles on highway 28 and cross it everyday for students.


28 isn't less safe than Georgia Ave, or Veirs Mill, or University, or Connecticut, or 355. MCPS expects high school students to walk along and cross those roads. MCPS even expects middle school students to walk along and cross those roads. So why not 28, too?


QO students cross 28 all the time.


Huh? Have you even been to QO? Crossing 28 at QO is nothing like crossing 270 or 370; or even 355 for that matter. Get real.

There's no way KF should go to Crown. There's only one way a kid can walk home from Crown to Kings Farm or College Gardens, and that's 40 minutes using the Shady Grove / 270 overpass. If there's ice or an emergency - not safe at all.


I don't think anyone was saying the KF kids should walk to Crown. The point was some kids on the west side of 270 but south of 28 could cross 28 and walk to Crown.


That’s really insane. I bet nobody in that area would walk if they’re rezoned to crown. Only driving could work which would will just cause traffic congestion.


No one from King Farm is walking to RM either...


Of course, King farm is more than 2 miles away from RM.

Anyway, expecting kids to walk 2 miles each way is unreasonable too. It really should be reduced to 1 mile.


No, Kings Farm is within a 2 mile radius of Crown. It's 2.5 miles by walking, bicycle or car; which is why it's looks longer in Google.

You missed the point - it's dangerous and kids might be encouraged to bike or walk - especially if they hang out at Rio at night after school.

But if you dont think that could ever happen and kids are wise enough never to walk up Omega Drive to cross the bridge heading home, nothing I can really say.


MCPS uses walking distance, not radius.


I wonder how they determine the walking route. Google map sometimes give shorter walking route but has to walk through some weird private paths which are not paved roads


In the 20 years I've been using Google Maps for finding walkable routes I haven't seen that yet.


DP. It's a thing. For example, try the Google Maps walking route between MLK M.S. and Waters Landing E.S. in Germantown.


^^^though I wouldn't call them "weird" private paths, they're just plain paved paths.


Google map shows me some short cuts through grass area right next to people’s backyards, which are only walkable when it is dry.


Could you give an example? I have never seen that.


Of course not, I'm making excuses as to why we can't change the status quo.


It’s not about boundary change. Just curious how mcps determines walking route. We’re 1.8-1.9 miles to a high school through private path but if taking public roads it would be 2.2 miles.

What do you mean by "private path"? For example, the paths in Montgomery Village are owned by the Montgomery Village corporations, so in that sense they're in private ownership, but they're public paths.


For example, walking through a grass area, or through a business parking lot
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Anonymous wrote:FARMS kids do not do better when they are bused.

That said, every child deserves to have fair access to a quality education. It looks bad when they have one school with a 1300 average SAT and one with a 950 SAT. But the kids with a 950 SAT would still score the same even if they moved to the 1300 average SAT school and vice versa.

I am a strong believer in the school within a school mindset that allows the ones that want to learn a separate peer group for their core classes.

People want stability in their schools. I hope the BOE doesn't go on a crusade to move kids around just because it's the "in thing to do"



Kids from poor families actually do do better when they attend low-poverty vs. high-poverty schools.

People are against change, period. But you can't have boundary changes without change.


This. The higher the poverty rate, the lower the performance. These need to be reduced:

SVHS- 49.9%
Gaithersburg- 57.6%
Watkins Mill- 64.4%

Seneca Valley High: 2023 Hispanic chronic absenteeism rate 51.0%:
https://reportcard.msde.maryland.gov/Graphs/#/Demographics/ChronicAbsenteeism/3/99/1/6/15/0104/2023

Gaithersburg High: 2023 Hispanic chronic absenteeism rate 55.0%:
https://reportcard.msde.maryland.gov/Graphs/#/Demographics/ChronicAbsenteeism/3/99/1/6/15/0551/2023

Watkins Mills High: 2023 Hispanic chronic absenteeism rate 58.9%:
https://reportcard.msde.maryland.gov/Graphs/#/Demographics/ChronicAbsenteeism/3/99/1/6/15/0545/2023

When you move chronically absent students to a school farther away, will they suddenly show up for school?




No they won't, but the concern extends beyond them. In some ways, they're going to do what they want to do. It's really more about the ripple effect throughout the entire school. When a huge portion of the student body is plagued by chronic absenteeism the impact to the school is profound. For example, using Watkins Mills numbers- 1,715 students, 616 are chronically absent. Imagine what that does to the school. Teachers now have to dedicate significant time to help the absent students catch up, which disrupts classroom dynamics and affects the experience of the kids who consistently go to school and do want to learn. There's a high number of students who are disengaged and a high number of disciplinary issues. There's probably limited clubs and programs compared to the other schools that don't have this problem because the demand is low. There's probably very little to no school spirit. Very low parental engagement. A sense of apathy among a large number of students and staff. Higher than normal teacher turnover rates. What you end up with is a negative school culture that is not an ideal environment for learning. This is what MCPS cares about and why demographics is a big factor in boundary studies.


You move these kids to other schools so each school having 10-15% chronically absent is still causing issues, and more schools will have low moral. Possibly more Hispanic students will be absent due to the distance. The people who care about education will not accept their kids being bussed to poor performing schools so they will leave or go to private schools. Then none of the schools will be ideal environment for learning. It’s a lose lose situation. Seriously this is a problem that busing cannot solve.

In fact, Hispanic organizations have surveyed Hispanic students in MCPS and found that many immigrant Hispanic students don't go to school because they were poorly educated in their home countries and could not keep up with their grade-level work. You cannot solve this problem by bussing.


Again, the issue isn't so much the kids who don't want to go to school. I agree we can't fix that. The significant issue is the ripple effect that having a large number of chronically absent kids have on a school and the resulting environment that it causes. It negatively impacts the other students, the staff, and the overall culture of the school.


Again this problem is not solvable by bussing. Bussing will only make the ripple effect in a few schools be extended to more schools.


MCPS buses over 100,000 students, twice a day. This boundary study will almost certainly reduce busing by reassigning students in potential walk zones.


+1. All the kids who live near Crown who currently take the bus to Gaithersburg or Wootton will become walkers. That's a good thing.


Name a neighborhood in wootton that’s actually walkable to crown?


Most obviously: the Washingtonian area, which is literally across Fields Road from the Crown HS site.

https://gis.mcpsmd.org/ServiceAreaMaps/WoottonHS.pdf

There are also some areas south of 28 that look like they're within 2.0 miles walking distance of the Crown HS site, some of which are also within walking distance of Wootton.


South of 28 is really not walkable to crown. There may be some houses just within 2 miles but not the entire neighborhood so still need bus for the neighborhood.


Some of it is.


It's going to depend on how the MCPS transportation department determines the walk zone for Crown. If they don't think it's safe for students to cross 28, or Shady Grove, or Sam Eig, then they will remain bus riders even if less than 2 miles away from Crown.


Definitely not safe to walk 2 miles on highway 28 and cross it everyday for students.


28 isn't less safe than Georgia Ave, or Veirs Mill, or University, or Connecticut, or 355. MCPS expects high school students to walk along and cross those roads. MCPS even expects middle school students to walk along and cross those roads. So why not 28, too?


QO students cross 28 all the time.


Huh? Have you even been to QO? Crossing 28 at QO is nothing like crossing 270 or 370; or even 355 for that matter. Get real.

There's no way KF should go to Crown. There's only one way a kid can walk home from Crown to Kings Farm or College Gardens, and that's 40 minutes using the Shady Grove / 270 overpass. If there's ice or an emergency - not safe at all.


I don't think anyone was saying the KF kids should walk to Crown. The point was some kids on the west side of 270 but south of 28 could cross 28 and walk to Crown.


That’s really insane. I bet nobody in that area would walk if they’re rezoned to crown. Only driving could work which would will just cause traffic congestion.


No one from King Farm is walking to RM either...


Of course, King farm is more than 2 miles away from RM.

Anyway, expecting kids to walk 2 miles each way is unreasonable too. It really should be reduced to 1 mile.


No, Kings Farm is within a 2 mile radius of Crown. It's 2.5 miles by walking, bicycle or car; which is why it's looks longer in Google.

You missed the point - it's dangerous and kids might be encouraged to bike or walk - especially if they hang out at Rio at night after school.

But if you dont think that could ever happen and kids are wise enough never to walk up Omega Drive to cross the bridge heading home, nothing I can really say.


MCPS uses walking distance, not radius.


I wonder how they determine the walking route. Google map sometimes give shorter walking route but has to walk through some weird private paths which are not paved roads


In the 20 years I've been using Google Maps for finding walkable routes I haven't seen that yet.


DP. It's a thing. For example, try the Google Maps walking route between MLK M.S. and Waters Landing E.S. in Germantown.


^^^though I wouldn't call them "weird" private paths, they're just plain paved paths.


Google map shows me some short cuts through grass area right next to people’s backyards, which are only walkable when it is dry.


Could you give an example? I have never seen that.


Of course not, I'm making excuses as to why we can't change the status quo.


It’s not about boundary change. Just curious how mcps determines walking route. We’re 1.8-1.9 miles to a high school through private path but if taking public roads it would be 2.2 miles.

What do you mean by "private path"? For example, the paths in Montgomery Village are owned by the Montgomery Village corporations, so in that sense they're in private ownership, but they're public paths.


For example, walking through a grass area, or through a business parking lot


Been using Google Maps for 20 years and have never seen anything like that. I don't think this is a major problem, but more of an excuse to say why we can't make boundary changes.
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Anonymous wrote:FARMS kids do not do better when they are bused.

That said, every child deserves to have fair access to a quality education. It looks bad when they have one school with a 1300 average SAT and one with a 950 SAT. But the kids with a 950 SAT would still score the same even if they moved to the 1300 average SAT school and vice versa.

I am a strong believer in the school within a school mindset that allows the ones that want to learn a separate peer group for their core classes.

People want stability in their schools. I hope the BOE doesn't go on a crusade to move kids around just because it's the "in thing to do"



Kids from poor families actually do do better when they attend low-poverty vs. high-poverty schools.

People are against change, period. But you can't have boundary changes without change.


This. The higher the poverty rate, the lower the performance. These need to be reduced:

SVHS- 49.9%
Gaithersburg- 57.6%
Watkins Mill- 64.4%

Seneca Valley High: 2023 Hispanic chronic absenteeism rate 51.0%:
https://reportcard.msde.maryland.gov/Graphs/#/Demographics/ChronicAbsenteeism/3/99/1/6/15/0104/2023

Gaithersburg High: 2023 Hispanic chronic absenteeism rate 55.0%:
https://reportcard.msde.maryland.gov/Graphs/#/Demographics/ChronicAbsenteeism/3/99/1/6/15/0551/2023

Watkins Mills High: 2023 Hispanic chronic absenteeism rate 58.9%:
https://reportcard.msde.maryland.gov/Graphs/#/Demographics/ChronicAbsenteeism/3/99/1/6/15/0545/2023

When you move chronically absent students to a school farther away, will they suddenly show up for school?




No they won't, but the concern extends beyond them. In some ways, they're going to do what they want to do. It's really more about the ripple effect throughout the entire school. When a huge portion of the student body is plagued by chronic absenteeism the impact to the school is profound. For example, using Watkins Mills numbers- 1,715 students, 616 are chronically absent. Imagine what that does to the school. Teachers now have to dedicate significant time to help the absent students catch up, which disrupts classroom dynamics and affects the experience of the kids who consistently go to school and do want to learn. There's a high number of students who are disengaged and a high number of disciplinary issues. There's probably limited clubs and programs compared to the other schools that don't have this problem because the demand is low. There's probably very little to no school spirit. Very low parental engagement. A sense of apathy among a large number of students and staff. Higher than normal teacher turnover rates. What you end up with is a negative school culture that is not an ideal environment for learning. This is what MCPS cares about and why demographics is a big factor in boundary studies.


You move these kids to other schools so each school having 10-15% chronically absent is still causing issues, and more schools will have low moral. Possibly more Hispanic students will be absent due to the distance. The people who care about education will not accept their kids being bussed to poor performing schools so they will leave or go to private schools. Then none of the schools will be ideal environment for learning. It’s a lose lose situation. Seriously this is a problem that busing cannot solve.

In fact, Hispanic organizations have surveyed Hispanic students in MCPS and found that many immigrant Hispanic students don't go to school because they were poorly educated in their home countries and could not keep up with their grade-level work. You cannot solve this problem by bussing.


Again, the issue isn't so much the kids who don't want to go to school. I agree we can't fix that. The significant issue is the ripple effect that having a large number of chronically absent kids have on a school and the resulting environment that it causes. It negatively impacts the other students, the staff, and the overall culture of the school.


Again this problem is not solvable by bussing. Bussing will only make the ripple effect in a few schools be extended to more schools.


MCPS buses over 100,000 students, twice a day. This boundary study will almost certainly reduce busing by reassigning students in potential walk zones.


+1. All the kids who live near Crown who currently take the bus to Gaithersburg or Wootton will become walkers. That's a good thing.


Name a neighborhood in wootton that’s actually walkable to crown?


Most obviously: the Washingtonian area, which is literally across Fields Road from the Crown HS site.

https://gis.mcpsmd.org/ServiceAreaMaps/WoottonHS.pdf

There are also some areas south of 28 that look like they're within 2.0 miles walking distance of the Crown HS site, some of which are also within walking distance of Wootton.


South of 28 is really not walkable to crown. There may be some houses just within 2 miles but not the entire neighborhood so still need bus for the neighborhood.


Some of it is.


It's going to depend on how the MCPS transportation department determines the walk zone for Crown. If they don't think it's safe for students to cross 28, or Shady Grove, or Sam Eig, then they will remain bus riders even if less than 2 miles away from Crown.


Definitely not safe to walk 2 miles on highway 28 and cross it everyday for students.


28 isn't less safe than Georgia Ave, or Veirs Mill, or University, or Connecticut, or 355. MCPS expects high school students to walk along and cross those roads. MCPS even expects middle school students to walk along and cross those roads. So why not 28, too?


QO students cross 28 all the time.


Huh? Have you even been to QO? Crossing 28 at QO is nothing like crossing 270 or 370; or even 355 for that matter. Get real.

There's no way KF should go to Crown. There's only one way a kid can walk home from Crown to Kings Farm or College Gardens, and that's 40 minutes using the Shady Grove / 270 overpass. If there's ice or an emergency - not safe at all.


I don't think anyone was saying the KF kids should walk to Crown. The point was some kids on the west side of 270 but south of 28 could cross 28 and walk to Crown.


That’s really insane. I bet nobody in that area would walk if they’re rezoned to crown. Only driving could work which would will just cause traffic congestion.


No one from King Farm is walking to RM either...


Of course, King farm is more than 2 miles away from RM.

Anyway, expecting kids to walk 2 miles each way is unreasonable too. It really should be reduced to 1 mile.


No, Kings Farm is within a 2 mile radius of Crown. It's 2.5 miles by walking, bicycle or car; which is why it's looks longer in Google.

You missed the point - it's dangerous and kids might be encouraged to bike or walk - especially if they hang out at Rio at night after school.

But if you dont think that could ever happen and kids are wise enough never to walk up Omega Drive to cross the bridge heading home, nothing I can really say.


MCPS uses walking distance, not radius.


I wonder how they determine the walking route. Google map sometimes give shorter walking route but has to walk through some weird private paths which are not paved roads


In the 20 years I've been using Google Maps for finding walkable routes I haven't seen that yet.


DP. It's a thing. For example, try the Google Maps walking route between MLK M.S. and Waters Landing E.S. in Germantown.


^^^though I wouldn't call them "weird" private paths, they're just plain paved paths.


Google map shows me some short cuts through grass area right next to people’s backyards, which are only walkable when it is dry.


Could you give an example? I have never seen that.


Of course not, I'm making excuses as to why we can't change the status quo.


It’s not about boundary change. Just curious how mcps determines walking route. We’re 1.8-1.9 miles to a high school through private path but if taking public roads it would be 2.2 miles.

What do you mean by "private path"? For example, the paths in Montgomery Village are owned by the Montgomery Village corporations, so in that sense they're in private ownership, but they're public paths.


For example, walking through a grass area, or through a business parking lot


Just searched apple map, and it doesn’t give the option to go through the private path. So it would be 2.2 miles by apple map.
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Anonymous wrote:FARMS kids do not do better when they are bused.

That said, every child deserves to have fair access to a quality education. It looks bad when they have one school with a 1300 average SAT and one with a 950 SAT. But the kids with a 950 SAT would still score the same even if they moved to the 1300 average SAT school and vice versa.

I am a strong believer in the school within a school mindset that allows the ones that want to learn a separate peer group for their core classes.

People want stability in their schools. I hope the BOE doesn't go on a crusade to move kids around just because it's the "in thing to do"



Kids from poor families actually do do better when they attend low-poverty vs. high-poverty schools.

People are against change, period. But you can't have boundary changes without change.


This. The higher the poverty rate, the lower the performance. These need to be reduced:

SVHS- 49.9%
Gaithersburg- 57.6%
Watkins Mill- 64.4%

Seneca Valley High: 2023 Hispanic chronic absenteeism rate 51.0%:
https://reportcard.msde.maryland.gov/Graphs/#/Demographics/ChronicAbsenteeism/3/99/1/6/15/0104/2023

Gaithersburg High: 2023 Hispanic chronic absenteeism rate 55.0%:
https://reportcard.msde.maryland.gov/Graphs/#/Demographics/ChronicAbsenteeism/3/99/1/6/15/0551/2023

Watkins Mills High: 2023 Hispanic chronic absenteeism rate 58.9%:
https://reportcard.msde.maryland.gov/Graphs/#/Demographics/ChronicAbsenteeism/3/99/1/6/15/0545/2023

When you move chronically absent students to a school farther away, will they suddenly show up for school?




No they won't, but the concern extends beyond them. In some ways, they're going to do what they want to do. It's really more about the ripple effect throughout the entire school. When a huge portion of the student body is plagued by chronic absenteeism the impact to the school is profound. For example, using Watkins Mills numbers- 1,715 students, 616 are chronically absent. Imagine what that does to the school. Teachers now have to dedicate significant time to help the absent students catch up, which disrupts classroom dynamics and affects the experience of the kids who consistently go to school and do want to learn. There's a high number of students who are disengaged and a high number of disciplinary issues. There's probably limited clubs and programs compared to the other schools that don't have this problem because the demand is low. There's probably very little to no school spirit. Very low parental engagement. A sense of apathy among a large number of students and staff. Higher than normal teacher turnover rates. What you end up with is a negative school culture that is not an ideal environment for learning. This is what MCPS cares about and why demographics is a big factor in boundary studies.


You move these kids to other schools so each school having 10-15% chronically absent is still causing issues, and more schools will have low moral. Possibly more Hispanic students will be absent due to the distance. The people who care about education will not accept their kids being bussed to poor performing schools so they will leave or go to private schools. Then none of the schools will be ideal environment for learning. It’s a lose lose situation. Seriously this is a problem that busing cannot solve.

In fact, Hispanic organizations have surveyed Hispanic students in MCPS and found that many immigrant Hispanic students don't go to school because they were poorly educated in their home countries and could not keep up with their grade-level work. You cannot solve this problem by bussing.


Again, the issue isn't so much the kids who don't want to go to school. I agree we can't fix that. The significant issue is the ripple effect that having a large number of chronically absent kids have on a school and the resulting environment that it causes. It negatively impacts the other students, the staff, and the overall culture of the school.


Again this problem is not solvable by bussing. Bussing will only make the ripple effect in a few schools be extended to more schools.


MCPS buses over 100,000 students, twice a day. This boundary study will almost certainly reduce busing by reassigning students in potential walk zones.


+1. All the kids who live near Crown who currently take the bus to Gaithersburg or Wootton will become walkers. That's a good thing.


Name a neighborhood in wootton that’s actually walkable to crown?


Most obviously: the Washingtonian area, which is literally across Fields Road from the Crown HS site.

https://gis.mcpsmd.org/ServiceAreaMaps/WoottonHS.pdf

There are also some areas south of 28 that look like they're within 2.0 miles walking distance of the Crown HS site, some of which are also within walking distance of Wootton.


South of 28 is really not walkable to crown. There may be some houses just within 2 miles but not the entire neighborhood so still need bus for the neighborhood.


Some of it is.


It's going to depend on how the MCPS transportation department determines the walk zone for Crown. If they don't think it's safe for students to cross 28, or Shady Grove, or Sam Eig, then they will remain bus riders even if less than 2 miles away from Crown.


Definitely not safe to walk 2 miles on highway 28 and cross it everyday for students.


28 isn't less safe than Georgia Ave, or Veirs Mill, or University, or Connecticut, or 355. MCPS expects high school students to walk along and cross those roads. MCPS even expects middle school students to walk along and cross those roads. So why not 28, too?


QO students cross 28 all the time.


Huh? Have you even been to QO? Crossing 28 at QO is nothing like crossing 270 or 370; or even 355 for that matter. Get real.

There's no way KF should go to Crown. There's only one way a kid can walk home from Crown to Kings Farm or College Gardens, and that's 40 minutes using the Shady Grove / 270 overpass. If there's ice or an emergency - not safe at all.


I don't think anyone was saying the KF kids should walk to Crown. The point was some kids on the west side of 270 but south of 28 could cross 28 and walk to Crown.


That’s really insane. I bet nobody in that area would walk if they’re rezoned to crown. Only driving could work which would will just cause traffic congestion.


No one from King Farm is walking to RM either...


Of course, King farm is more than 2 miles away from RM.

Anyway, expecting kids to walk 2 miles each way is unreasonable too. It really should be reduced to 1 mile.


No, Kings Farm is within a 2 mile radius of Crown. It's 2.5 miles by walking, bicycle or car; which is why it's looks longer in Google.

You missed the point - it's dangerous and kids might be encouraged to bike or walk - especially if they hang out at Rio at night after school.

But if you dont think that could ever happen and kids are wise enough never to walk up Omega Drive to cross the bridge heading home, nothing I can really say.


MCPS uses walking distance, not radius.


I wonder how they determine the walking route. Google map sometimes give shorter walking route but has to walk through some weird private paths which are not paved roads


In the 20 years I've been using Google Maps for finding walkable routes I haven't seen that yet.


DP. It's a thing. For example, try the Google Maps walking route between MLK M.S. and Waters Landing E.S. in Germantown.


^^^though I wouldn't call them "weird" private paths, they're just plain paved paths.


Google map shows me some short cuts through grass area right next to people’s backyards, which are only walkable when it is dry.


Could you give an example? I have never seen that.


Of course not, I'm making excuses as to why we can't change the status quo.


It’s not about boundary change. Just curious how mcps determines walking route. We’re 1.8-1.9 miles to a high school through private path but if taking public roads it would be 2.2 miles.

What do you mean by "private path"? For example, the paths in Montgomery Village are owned by the Montgomery Village corporations, so in that sense they're in private ownership, but they're public paths.


For example, walking through a grass area, or through a business parking lot


Been using Google Maps for 20 years and have never seen anything like that. I don't think this is a major problem, but more of an excuse to say why we can't make boundary changes.


Again, it’s nothing about boundary change. Just wonder if we become walker or still busser if rezoned.
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Anonymous wrote:FARMS kids do not do better when they are bused.

That said, every child deserves to have fair access to a quality education. It looks bad when they have one school with a 1300 average SAT and one with a 950 SAT. But the kids with a 950 SAT would still score the same even if they moved to the 1300 average SAT school and vice versa.

I am a strong believer in the school within a school mindset that allows the ones that want to learn a separate peer group for their core classes.

People want stability in their schools. I hope the BOE doesn't go on a crusade to move kids around just because it's the "in thing to do"



Kids from poor families actually do do better when they attend low-poverty vs. high-poverty schools.

People are against change, period. But you can't have boundary changes without change.


This. The higher the poverty rate, the lower the performance. These need to be reduced:

SVHS- 49.9%
Gaithersburg- 57.6%
Watkins Mill- 64.4%

Seneca Valley High: 2023 Hispanic chronic absenteeism rate 51.0%:
https://reportcard.msde.maryland.gov/Graphs/#/Demographics/ChronicAbsenteeism/3/99/1/6/15/0104/2023

Gaithersburg High: 2023 Hispanic chronic absenteeism rate 55.0%:
https://reportcard.msde.maryland.gov/Graphs/#/Demographics/ChronicAbsenteeism/3/99/1/6/15/0551/2023

Watkins Mills High: 2023 Hispanic chronic absenteeism rate 58.9%:
https://reportcard.msde.maryland.gov/Graphs/#/Demographics/ChronicAbsenteeism/3/99/1/6/15/0545/2023

When you move chronically absent students to a school farther away, will they suddenly show up for school?




No they won't, but the concern extends beyond them. In some ways, they're going to do what they want to do. It's really more about the ripple effect throughout the entire school. When a huge portion of the student body is plagued by chronic absenteeism the impact to the school is profound. For example, using Watkins Mills numbers- 1,715 students, 616 are chronically absent. Imagine what that does to the school. Teachers now have to dedicate significant time to help the absent students catch up, which disrupts classroom dynamics and affects the experience of the kids who consistently go to school and do want to learn. There's a high number of students who are disengaged and a high number of disciplinary issues. There's probably limited clubs and programs compared to the other schools that don't have this problem because the demand is low. There's probably very little to no school spirit. Very low parental engagement. A sense of apathy among a large number of students and staff. Higher than normal teacher turnover rates. What you end up with is a negative school culture that is not an ideal environment for learning. This is what MCPS cares about and why demographics is a big factor in boundary studies.


You move these kids to other schools so each school having 10-15% chronically absent is still causing issues, and more schools will have low moral. Possibly more Hispanic students will be absent due to the distance. The people who care about education will not accept their kids being bussed to poor performing schools so they will leave or go to private schools. Then none of the schools will be ideal environment for learning. It’s a lose lose situation. Seriously this is a problem that busing cannot solve.

In fact, Hispanic organizations have surveyed Hispanic students in MCPS and found that many immigrant Hispanic students don't go to school because they were poorly educated in their home countries and could not keep up with their grade-level work. You cannot solve this problem by bussing.


Again, the issue isn't so much the kids who don't want to go to school. I agree we can't fix that. The significant issue is the ripple effect that having a large number of chronically absent kids have on a school and the resulting environment that it causes. It negatively impacts the other students, the staff, and the overall culture of the school.


Again this problem is not solvable by bussing. Bussing will only make the ripple effect in a few schools be extended to more schools.


MCPS buses over 100,000 students, twice a day. This boundary study will almost certainly reduce busing by reassigning students in potential walk zones.


+1. All the kids who live near Crown who currently take the bus to Gaithersburg or Wootton will become walkers. That's a good thing.


Name a neighborhood in wootton that’s actually walkable to crown?


Most obviously: the Washingtonian area, which is literally across Fields Road from the Crown HS site.

https://gis.mcpsmd.org/ServiceAreaMaps/WoottonHS.pdf

There are also some areas south of 28 that look like they're within 2.0 miles walking distance of the Crown HS site, some of which are also within walking distance of Wootton.


South of 28 is really not walkable to crown. There may be some houses just within 2 miles but not the entire neighborhood so still need bus for the neighborhood.


Some of it is.


It's going to depend on how the MCPS transportation department determines the walk zone for Crown. If they don't think it's safe for students to cross 28, or Shady Grove, or Sam Eig, then they will remain bus riders even if less than 2 miles away from Crown.


Definitely not safe to walk 2 miles on highway 28 and cross it everyday for students.


28 isn't less safe than Georgia Ave, or Veirs Mill, or University, or Connecticut, or 355. MCPS expects high school students to walk along and cross those roads. MCPS even expects middle school students to walk along and cross those roads. So why not 28, too?


QO students cross 28 all the time.


Huh? Have you even been to QO? Crossing 28 at QO is nothing like crossing 270 or 370; or even 355 for that matter. Get real.

There's no way KF should go to Crown. There's only one way a kid can walk home from Crown to Kings Farm or College Gardens, and that's 40 minutes using the Shady Grove / 270 overpass. If there's ice or an emergency - not safe at all.


I don't think anyone was saying the KF kids should walk to Crown. The point was some kids on the west side of 270 but south of 28 could cross 28 and walk to Crown.


That’s really insane. I bet nobody in that area would walk if they’re rezoned to crown. Only driving could work which would will just cause traffic congestion.


No one from King Farm is walking to RM either...


Of course, King farm is more than 2 miles away from RM.

Anyway, expecting kids to walk 2 miles each way is unreasonable too. It really should be reduced to 1 mile.


No, Kings Farm is within a 2 mile radius of Crown. It's 2.5 miles by walking, bicycle or car; which is why it's looks longer in Google.

You missed the point - it's dangerous and kids might be encouraged to bike or walk - especially if they hang out at Rio at night after school.

But if you dont think that could ever happen and kids are wise enough never to walk up Omega Drive to cross the bridge heading home, nothing I can really say.


MCPS uses walking distance, not radius.


I wonder how they determine the walking route. Google map sometimes give shorter walking route but has to walk through some weird private paths which are not paved roads


In the 20 years I've been using Google Maps for finding walkable routes I haven't seen that yet.


DP. It's a thing. For example, try the Google Maps walking route between MLK M.S. and Waters Landing E.S. in Germantown.


^^^though I wouldn't call them "weird" private paths, they're just plain paved paths.


Google map shows me some short cuts through grass area right next to people’s backyards, which are only walkable when it is dry.


Could you give an example? I have never seen that.


Of course not, I'm making excuses as to why we can't change the status quo.


It’s not about boundary change. Just curious how mcps determines walking route. We’re 1.8-1.9 miles to a high school through private path but if taking public roads it would be 2.2 miles.

What do you mean by "private path"? For example, the paths in Montgomery Village are owned by the Montgomery Village corporations, so in that sense they're in private ownership, but they're public paths.


For example, walking through a grass area, or through a business parking lot


Been using Google Maps for 20 years and have never seen anything like that. I don't think this is a major problem, but more of an excuse to say why we can't make boundary changes.


Do you use google map to walk 2 miles a lot ? Driving is a different story.
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Anonymous wrote:FARMS kids do not do better when they are bused.

That said, every child deserves to have fair access to a quality education. It looks bad when they have one school with a 1300 average SAT and one with a 950 SAT. But the kids with a 950 SAT would still score the same even if they moved to the 1300 average SAT school and vice versa.

I am a strong believer in the school within a school mindset that allows the ones that want to learn a separate peer group for their core classes.

People want stability in their schools. I hope the BOE doesn't go on a crusade to move kids around just because it's the "in thing to do"



Kids from poor families actually do do better when they attend low-poverty vs. high-poverty schools.

People are against change, period. But you can't have boundary changes without change.


This. The higher the poverty rate, the lower the performance. These need to be reduced:

SVHS- 49.9%
Gaithersburg- 57.6%
Watkins Mill- 64.4%

Seneca Valley High: 2023 Hispanic chronic absenteeism rate 51.0%:
https://reportcard.msde.maryland.gov/Graphs/#/Demographics/ChronicAbsenteeism/3/99/1/6/15/0104/2023

Gaithersburg High: 2023 Hispanic chronic absenteeism rate 55.0%:
https://reportcard.msde.maryland.gov/Graphs/#/Demographics/ChronicAbsenteeism/3/99/1/6/15/0551/2023

Watkins Mills High: 2023 Hispanic chronic absenteeism rate 58.9%:
https://reportcard.msde.maryland.gov/Graphs/#/Demographics/ChronicAbsenteeism/3/99/1/6/15/0545/2023

When you move chronically absent students to a school farther away, will they suddenly show up for school?




No they won't, but the concern extends beyond them. In some ways, they're going to do what they want to do. It's really more about the ripple effect throughout the entire school. When a huge portion of the student body is plagued by chronic absenteeism the impact to the school is profound. For example, using Watkins Mills numbers- 1,715 students, 616 are chronically absent. Imagine what that does to the school. Teachers now have to dedicate significant time to help the absent students catch up, which disrupts classroom dynamics and affects the experience of the kids who consistently go to school and do want to learn. There's a high number of students who are disengaged and a high number of disciplinary issues. There's probably limited clubs and programs compared to the other schools that don't have this problem because the demand is low. There's probably very little to no school spirit. Very low parental engagement. A sense of apathy among a large number of students and staff. Higher than normal teacher turnover rates. What you end up with is a negative school culture that is not an ideal environment for learning. This is what MCPS cares about and why demographics is a big factor in boundary studies.


You move these kids to other schools so each school having 10-15% chronically absent is still causing issues, and more schools will have low moral. Possibly more Hispanic students will be absent due to the distance. The people who care about education will not accept their kids being bussed to poor performing schools so they will leave or go to private schools. Then none of the schools will be ideal environment for learning. It’s a lose lose situation. Seriously this is a problem that busing cannot solve.

In fact, Hispanic organizations have surveyed Hispanic students in MCPS and found that many immigrant Hispanic students don't go to school because they were poorly educated in their home countries and could not keep up with their grade-level work. You cannot solve this problem by bussing.


Again, the issue isn't so much the kids who don't want to go to school. I agree we can't fix that. The significant issue is the ripple effect that having a large number of chronically absent kids have on a school and the resulting environment that it causes. It negatively impacts the other students, the staff, and the overall culture of the school.


Again this problem is not solvable by bussing. Bussing will only make the ripple effect in a few schools be extended to more schools.


MCPS buses over 100,000 students, twice a day. This boundary study will almost certainly reduce busing by reassigning students in potential walk zones.


+1. All the kids who live near Crown who currently take the bus to Gaithersburg or Wootton will become walkers. That's a good thing.


Name a neighborhood in wootton that’s actually walkable to crown?


Most obviously: the Washingtonian area, which is literally across Fields Road from the Crown HS site.

https://gis.mcpsmd.org/ServiceAreaMaps/WoottonHS.pdf

There are also some areas south of 28 that look like they're within 2.0 miles walking distance of the Crown HS site, some of which are also within walking distance of Wootton.


South of 28 is really not walkable to crown. There may be some houses just within 2 miles but not the entire neighborhood so still need bus for the neighborhood.


Some of it is.


It's going to depend on how the MCPS transportation department determines the walk zone for Crown. If they don't think it's safe for students to cross 28, or Shady Grove, or Sam Eig, then they will remain bus riders even if less than 2 miles away from Crown.


Definitely not safe to walk 2 miles on highway 28 and cross it everyday for students.


28 isn't less safe than Georgia Ave, or Veirs Mill, or University, or Connecticut, or 355. MCPS expects high school students to walk along and cross those roads. MCPS even expects middle school students to walk along and cross those roads. So why not 28, too?


QO students cross 28 all the time.


Huh? Have you even been to QO? Crossing 28 at QO is nothing like crossing 270 or 370; or even 355 for that matter. Get real.

There's no way KF should go to Crown. There's only one way a kid can walk home from Crown to Kings Farm or College Gardens, and that's 40 minutes using the Shady Grove / 270 overpass. If there's ice or an emergency - not safe at all.


I don't think anyone was saying the KF kids should walk to Crown. The point was some kids on the west side of 270 but south of 28 could cross 28 and walk to Crown.


That’s really insane. I bet nobody in that area would walk if they’re rezoned to crown. Only driving could work which would will just cause traffic congestion.


No one from King Farm is walking to RM either...


Of course, King farm is more than 2 miles away from RM.

Anyway, expecting kids to walk 2 miles each way is unreasonable too. It really should be reduced to 1 mile.


No, Kings Farm is within a 2 mile radius of Crown. It's 2.5 miles by walking, bicycle or car; which is why it's looks longer in Google.

You missed the point - it's dangerous and kids might be encouraged to bike or walk - especially if they hang out at Rio at night after school.

But if you dont think that could ever happen and kids are wise enough never to walk up Omega Drive to cross the bridge heading home, nothing I can really say.


MCPS uses walking distance, not radius.


I wonder how they determine the walking route. Google map sometimes give shorter walking route but has to walk through some weird private paths which are not paved roads


In the 20 years I've been using Google Maps for finding walkable routes I haven't seen that yet.


DP. It's a thing. For example, try the Google Maps walking route between MLK M.S. and Waters Landing E.S. in Germantown.


^^^though I wouldn't call them "weird" private paths, they're just plain paved paths.


Google map shows me some short cuts through grass area right next to people’s backyards, which are only walkable when it is dry.


Could you give an example? I have never seen that.


Of course not, I'm making excuses as to why we can't change the status quo.


It’s not about boundary change. Just curious how mcps determines walking route. We’re 1.8-1.9 miles to a high school through private path but if taking public roads it would be 2.2 miles.

What do you mean by "private path"? For example, the paths in Montgomery Village are owned by the Montgomery Village corporations, so in that sense they're in private ownership, but they're public paths.


For example, walking through a grass area, or through a business parking lot


Just searched apple map, and it doesn’t give the option to go through the private path. So it would be 2.2 miles by apple map.


It would really help to know what kind of path the "private path" is.
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Anonymous wrote:FARMS kids do not do better when they are bused.

That said, every child deserves to have fair access to a quality education. It looks bad when they have one school with a 1300 average SAT and one with a 950 SAT. But the kids with a 950 SAT would still score the same even if they moved to the 1300 average SAT school and vice versa.

I am a strong believer in the school within a school mindset that allows the ones that want to learn a separate peer group for their core classes.

People want stability in their schools. I hope the BOE doesn't go on a crusade to move kids around just because it's the "in thing to do"



Kids from poor families actually do do better when they attend low-poverty vs. high-poverty schools.

People are against change, period. But you can't have boundary changes without change.


This. The higher the poverty rate, the lower the performance. These need to be reduced:

SVHS- 49.9%
Gaithersburg- 57.6%
Watkins Mill- 64.4%

Seneca Valley High: 2023 Hispanic chronic absenteeism rate 51.0%:
https://reportcard.msde.maryland.gov/Graphs/#/Demographics/ChronicAbsenteeism/3/99/1/6/15/0104/2023

Gaithersburg High: 2023 Hispanic chronic absenteeism rate 55.0%:
https://reportcard.msde.maryland.gov/Graphs/#/Demographics/ChronicAbsenteeism/3/99/1/6/15/0551/2023

Watkins Mills High: 2023 Hispanic chronic absenteeism rate 58.9%:
https://reportcard.msde.maryland.gov/Graphs/#/Demographics/ChronicAbsenteeism/3/99/1/6/15/0545/2023

When you move chronically absent students to a school farther away, will they suddenly show up for school?




No they won't, but the concern extends beyond them. In some ways, they're going to do what they want to do. It's really more about the ripple effect throughout the entire school. When a huge portion of the student body is plagued by chronic absenteeism the impact to the school is profound. For example, using Watkins Mills numbers- 1,715 students, 616 are chronically absent. Imagine what that does to the school. Teachers now have to dedicate significant time to help the absent students catch up, which disrupts classroom dynamics and affects the experience of the kids who consistently go to school and do want to learn. There's a high number of students who are disengaged and a high number of disciplinary issues. There's probably limited clubs and programs compared to the other schools that don't have this problem because the demand is low. There's probably very little to no school spirit. Very low parental engagement. A sense of apathy among a large number of students and staff. Higher than normal teacher turnover rates. What you end up with is a negative school culture that is not an ideal environment for learning. This is what MCPS cares about and why demographics is a big factor in boundary studies.


You move these kids to other schools so each school having 10-15% chronically absent is still causing issues, and more schools will have low moral. Possibly more Hispanic students will be absent due to the distance. The people who care about education will not accept their kids being bussed to poor performing schools so they will leave or go to private schools. Then none of the schools will be ideal environment for learning. It’s a lose lose situation. Seriously this is a problem that busing cannot solve.

In fact, Hispanic organizations have surveyed Hispanic students in MCPS and found that many immigrant Hispanic students don't go to school because they were poorly educated in their home countries and could not keep up with their grade-level work. You cannot solve this problem by bussing.


Again, the issue isn't so much the kids who don't want to go to school. I agree we can't fix that. The significant issue is the ripple effect that having a large number of chronically absent kids have on a school and the resulting environment that it causes. It negatively impacts the other students, the staff, and the overall culture of the school.


Again this problem is not solvable by bussing. Bussing will only make the ripple effect in a few schools be extended to more schools.


MCPS buses over 100,000 students, twice a day. This boundary study will almost certainly reduce busing by reassigning students in potential walk zones.


+1. All the kids who live near Crown who currently take the bus to Gaithersburg or Wootton will become walkers. That's a good thing.


Name a neighborhood in wootton that’s actually walkable to crown?


Most obviously: the Washingtonian area, which is literally across Fields Road from the Crown HS site.

https://gis.mcpsmd.org/ServiceAreaMaps/WoottonHS.pdf

There are also some areas south of 28 that look like they're within 2.0 miles walking distance of the Crown HS site, some of which are also within walking distance of Wootton.


South of 28 is really not walkable to crown. There may be some houses just within 2 miles but not the entire neighborhood so still need bus for the neighborhood.


Some of it is.


It's going to depend on how the MCPS transportation department determines the walk zone for Crown. If they don't think it's safe for students to cross 28, or Shady Grove, or Sam Eig, then they will remain bus riders even if less than 2 miles away from Crown.


Definitely not safe to walk 2 miles on highway 28 and cross it everyday for students.


28 isn't less safe than Georgia Ave, or Veirs Mill, or University, or Connecticut, or 355. MCPS expects high school students to walk along and cross those roads. MCPS even expects middle school students to walk along and cross those roads. So why not 28, too?


QO students cross 28 all the time.


Huh? Have you even been to QO? Crossing 28 at QO is nothing like crossing 270 or 370; or even 355 for that matter. Get real.

There's no way KF should go to Crown. There's only one way a kid can walk home from Crown to Kings Farm or College Gardens, and that's 40 minutes using the Shady Grove / 270 overpass. If there's ice or an emergency - not safe at all.


I don't think anyone was saying the KF kids should walk to Crown. The point was some kids on the west side of 270 but south of 28 could cross 28 and walk to Crown.


That’s really insane. I bet nobody in that area would walk if they’re rezoned to crown. Only driving could work which would will just cause traffic congestion.


No one from King Farm is walking to RM either...


Of course, King farm is more than 2 miles away from RM.

Anyway, expecting kids to walk 2 miles each way is unreasonable too. It really should be reduced to 1 mile.


No, Kings Farm is within a 2 mile radius of Crown. It's 2.5 miles by walking, bicycle or car; which is why it's looks longer in Google.

You missed the point - it's dangerous and kids might be encouraged to bike or walk - especially if they hang out at Rio at night after school.

But if you dont think that could ever happen and kids are wise enough never to walk up Omega Drive to cross the bridge heading home, nothing I can really say.


MCPS uses walking distance, not radius.


I wonder how they determine the walking route. Google map sometimes give shorter walking route but has to walk through some weird private paths which are not paved roads


In the 20 years I've been using Google Maps for finding walkable routes I haven't seen that yet.


DP. It's a thing. For example, try the Google Maps walking route between MLK M.S. and Waters Landing E.S. in Germantown.


^^^though I wouldn't call them "weird" private paths, they're just plain paved paths.


Google map shows me some short cuts through grass area right next to people’s backyards, which are only walkable when it is dry.


Could you give an example? I have never seen that.


Of course not, I'm making excuses as to why we can't change the status quo.


It’s not about boundary change. Just curious how mcps determines walking route. We’re 1.8-1.9 miles to a high school through private path but if taking public roads it would be 2.2 miles.

What do you mean by "private path"? For example, the paths in Montgomery Village are owned by the Montgomery Village corporations, so in that sense they're in private ownership, but they're public paths.


For example, walking through a grass area, or through a business parking lot


Been using Google Maps for 20 years and have never seen anything like that. I don't think this is a major problem, but more of an excuse to say why we can't make boundary changes.


Do you use google map to walk 2 miles a lot ? Driving is a different story.


As a matter of fact I do because I don't drive.
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Anonymous wrote:FARMS kids do not do better when they are bused.

That said, every child deserves to have fair access to a quality education. It looks bad when they have one school with a 1300 average SAT and one with a 950 SAT. But the kids with a 950 SAT would still score the same even if they moved to the 1300 average SAT school and vice versa.

I am a strong believer in the school within a school mindset that allows the ones that want to learn a separate peer group for their core classes.

People want stability in their schools. I hope the BOE doesn't go on a crusade to move kids around just because it's the "in thing to do"



Kids from poor families actually do do better when they attend low-poverty vs. high-poverty schools.

People are against change, period. But you can't have boundary changes without change.


This. The higher the poverty rate, the lower the performance. These need to be reduced:

SVHS- 49.9%
Gaithersburg- 57.6%
Watkins Mill- 64.4%

Seneca Valley High: 2023 Hispanic chronic absenteeism rate 51.0%:
https://reportcard.msde.maryland.gov/Graphs/#/Demographics/ChronicAbsenteeism/3/99/1/6/15/0104/2023

Gaithersburg High: 2023 Hispanic chronic absenteeism rate 55.0%:
https://reportcard.msde.maryland.gov/Graphs/#/Demographics/ChronicAbsenteeism/3/99/1/6/15/0551/2023

Watkins Mills High: 2023 Hispanic chronic absenteeism rate 58.9%:
https://reportcard.msde.maryland.gov/Graphs/#/Demographics/ChronicAbsenteeism/3/99/1/6/15/0545/2023

When you move chronically absent students to a school farther away, will they suddenly show up for school?




No they won't, but the concern extends beyond them. In some ways, they're going to do what they want to do. It's really more about the ripple effect throughout the entire school. When a huge portion of the student body is plagued by chronic absenteeism the impact to the school is profound. For example, using Watkins Mills numbers- 1,715 students, 616 are chronically absent. Imagine what that does to the school. Teachers now have to dedicate significant time to help the absent students catch up, which disrupts classroom dynamics and affects the experience of the kids who consistently go to school and do want to learn. There's a high number of students who are disengaged and a high number of disciplinary issues. There's probably limited clubs and programs compared to the other schools that don't have this problem because the demand is low. There's probably very little to no school spirit. Very low parental engagement. A sense of apathy among a large number of students and staff. Higher than normal teacher turnover rates. What you end up with is a negative school culture that is not an ideal environment for learning. This is what MCPS cares about and why demographics is a big factor in boundary studies.


You move these kids to other schools so each school having 10-15% chronically absent is still causing issues, and more schools will have low moral. Possibly more Hispanic students will be absent due to the distance. The people who care about education will not accept their kids being bussed to poor performing schools so they will leave or go to private schools. Then none of the schools will be ideal environment for learning. It’s a lose lose situation. Seriously this is a problem that busing cannot solve.

In fact, Hispanic organizations have surveyed Hispanic students in MCPS and found that many immigrant Hispanic students don't go to school because they were poorly educated in their home countries and could not keep up with their grade-level work. You cannot solve this problem by bussing.


Again, the issue isn't so much the kids who don't want to go to school. I agree we can't fix that. The significant issue is the ripple effect that having a large number of chronically absent kids have on a school and the resulting environment that it causes. It negatively impacts the other students, the staff, and the overall culture of the school.


Again this problem is not solvable by bussing. Bussing will only make the ripple effect in a few schools be extended to more schools.


MCPS buses over 100,000 students, twice a day. This boundary study will almost certainly reduce busing by reassigning students in potential walk zones.


+1. All the kids who live near Crown who currently take the bus to Gaithersburg or Wootton will become walkers. That's a good thing.


Name a neighborhood in wootton that’s actually walkable to crown?


Most obviously: the Washingtonian area, which is literally across Fields Road from the Crown HS site.

https://gis.mcpsmd.org/ServiceAreaMaps/WoottonHS.pdf

There are also some areas south of 28 that look like they're within 2.0 miles walking distance of the Crown HS site, some of which are also within walking distance of Wootton.


South of 28 is really not walkable to crown. There may be some houses just within 2 miles but not the entire neighborhood so still need bus for the neighborhood.


Some of it is.


It's going to depend on how the MCPS transportation department determines the walk zone for Crown. If they don't think it's safe for students to cross 28, or Shady Grove, or Sam Eig, then they will remain bus riders even if less than 2 miles away from Crown.


Definitely not safe to walk 2 miles on highway 28 and cross it everyday for students.


28 isn't less safe than Georgia Ave, or Veirs Mill, or University, or Connecticut, or 355. MCPS expects high school students to walk along and cross those roads. MCPS even expects middle school students to walk along and cross those roads. So why not 28, too?


QO students cross 28 all the time.


Huh? Have you even been to QO? Crossing 28 at QO is nothing like crossing 270 or 370; or even 355 for that matter. Get real.

There's no way KF should go to Crown. There's only one way a kid can walk home from Crown to Kings Farm or College Gardens, and that's 40 minutes using the Shady Grove / 270 overpass. If there's ice or an emergency - not safe at all.


I don't think anyone was saying the KF kids should walk to Crown. The point was some kids on the west side of 270 but south of 28 could cross 28 and walk to Crown.


That’s really insane. I bet nobody in that area would walk if they’re rezoned to crown. Only driving could work which would will just cause traffic congestion.


No one from King Farm is walking to RM either...


Of course, King farm is more than 2 miles away from RM.

Anyway, expecting kids to walk 2 miles each way is unreasonable too. It really should be reduced to 1 mile.


No, Kings Farm is within a 2 mile radius of Crown. It's 2.5 miles by walking, bicycle or car; which is why it's looks longer in Google.

You missed the point - it's dangerous and kids might be encouraged to bike or walk - especially if they hang out at Rio at night after school.

But if you dont think that could ever happen and kids are wise enough never to walk up Omega Drive to cross the bridge heading home, nothing I can really say.


MCPS uses walking distance, not radius.


I wonder how they determine the walking route. Google map sometimes give shorter walking route but has to walk through some weird private paths which are not paved roads


In the 20 years I've been using Google Maps for finding walkable routes I haven't seen that yet.


DP. It's a thing. For example, try the Google Maps walking route between MLK M.S. and Waters Landing E.S. in Germantown.


^^^though I wouldn't call them "weird" private paths, they're just plain paved paths.


Google map shows me some short cuts through grass area right next to people’s backyards, which are only walkable when it is dry.


Could you give an example? I have never seen that.


Of course not, I'm making excuses as to why we can't change the status quo.


It’s not about boundary change. Just curious how mcps determines walking route. We’re 1.8-1.9 miles to a high school through private path but if taking public roads it would be 2.2 miles.

What do you mean by "private path"? For example, the paths in Montgomery Village are owned by the Montgomery Village corporations, so in that sense they're in private ownership, but they're public paths.


For example, walking through a grass area, or through a business parking lot


Been using Google Maps for 20 years and have never seen anything like that. I don't think this is a major problem, but more of an excuse to say why we can't make boundary changes.


Again, it’s nothing about boundary change. Just wonder if we become walker or still busser if rezoned.


DP. No one will be able to answer that question for you at this time. Once they have the new boundaries decided, they will plot out the bus routes. There will likely be some bus stops that are within 2 miles of the school, but no one knows where yet.
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Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:FARMS kids do not do better when they are bused.

That said, every child deserves to have fair access to a quality education. It looks bad when they have one school with a 1300 average SAT and one with a 950 SAT. But the kids with a 950 SAT would still score the same even if they moved to the 1300 average SAT school and vice versa.

I am a strong believer in the school within a school mindset that allows the ones that want to learn a separate peer group for their core classes.

People want stability in their schools. I hope the BOE doesn't go on a crusade to move kids around just because it's the "in thing to do"



Kids from poor families actually do do better when they attend low-poverty vs. high-poverty schools.

People are against change, period. But you can't have boundary changes without change.


This. The higher the poverty rate, the lower the performance. These need to be reduced:

SVHS- 49.9%
Gaithersburg- 57.6%
Watkins Mill- 64.4%

Seneca Valley High: 2023 Hispanic chronic absenteeism rate 51.0%:
https://reportcard.msde.maryland.gov/Graphs/#/Demographics/ChronicAbsenteeism/3/99/1/6/15/0104/2023

Gaithersburg High: 2023 Hispanic chronic absenteeism rate 55.0%:
https://reportcard.msde.maryland.gov/Graphs/#/Demographics/ChronicAbsenteeism/3/99/1/6/15/0551/2023

Watkins Mills High: 2023 Hispanic chronic absenteeism rate 58.9%:
https://reportcard.msde.maryland.gov/Graphs/#/Demographics/ChronicAbsenteeism/3/99/1/6/15/0545/2023

When you move chronically absent students to a school farther away, will they suddenly show up for school?




No they won't, but the concern extends beyond them. In some ways, they're going to do what they want to do. It's really more about the ripple effect throughout the entire school. When a huge portion of the student body is plagued by chronic absenteeism the impact to the school is profound. For example, using Watkins Mills numbers- 1,715 students, 616 are chronically absent. Imagine what that does to the school. Teachers now have to dedicate significant time to help the absent students catch up, which disrupts classroom dynamics and affects the experience of the kids who consistently go to school and do want to learn. There's a high number of students who are disengaged and a high number of disciplinary issues. There's probably limited clubs and programs compared to the other schools that don't have this problem because the demand is low. There's probably very little to no school spirit. Very low parental engagement. A sense of apathy among a large number of students and staff. Higher than normal teacher turnover rates. What you end up with is a negative school culture that is not an ideal environment for learning. This is what MCPS cares about and why demographics is a big factor in boundary studies.


You move these kids to other schools so each school having 10-15% chronically absent is still causing issues, and more schools will have low moral. Possibly more Hispanic students will be absent due to the distance. The people who care about education will not accept their kids being bussed to poor performing schools so they will leave or go to private schools. Then none of the schools will be ideal environment for learning. It’s a lose lose situation. Seriously this is a problem that busing cannot solve.

In fact, Hispanic organizations have surveyed Hispanic students in MCPS and found that many immigrant Hispanic students don't go to school because they were poorly educated in their home countries and could not keep up with their grade-level work. You cannot solve this problem by bussing.


Again, the issue isn't so much the kids who don't want to go to school. I agree we can't fix that. The significant issue is the ripple effect that having a large number of chronically absent kids have on a school and the resulting environment that it causes. It negatively impacts the other students, the staff, and the overall culture of the school.


Again this problem is not solvable by bussing. Bussing will only make the ripple effect in a few schools be extended to more schools.


MCPS buses over 100,000 students, twice a day. This boundary study will almost certainly reduce busing by reassigning students in potential walk zones.


+1. All the kids who live near Crown who currently take the bus to Gaithersburg or Wootton will become walkers. That's a good thing.


Name a neighborhood in wootton that’s actually walkable to crown?


Most obviously: the Washingtonian area, which is literally across Fields Road from the Crown HS site.

https://gis.mcpsmd.org/ServiceAreaMaps/WoottonHS.pdf

There are also some areas south of 28 that look like they're within 2.0 miles walking distance of the Crown HS site, some of which are also within walking distance of Wootton.


South of 28 is really not walkable to crown. There may be some houses just within 2 miles but not the entire neighborhood so still need bus for the neighborhood.


Some of it is.


It's going to depend on how the MCPS transportation department determines the walk zone for Crown. If they don't think it's safe for students to cross 28, or Shady Grove, or Sam Eig, then they will remain bus riders even if less than 2 miles away from Crown.


Definitely not safe to walk 2 miles on highway 28 and cross it everyday for students.


28 isn't less safe than Georgia Ave, or Veirs Mill, or University, or Connecticut, or 355. MCPS expects high school students to walk along and cross those roads. MCPS even expects middle school students to walk along and cross those roads. So why not 28, too?


QO students cross 28 all the time.


Huh? Have you even been to QO? Crossing 28 at QO is nothing like crossing 270 or 370; or even 355 for that matter. Get real.

There's no way KF should go to Crown. There's only one way a kid can walk home from Crown to Kings Farm or College Gardens, and that's 40 minutes using the Shady Grove / 270 overpass. If there's ice or an emergency - not safe at all.


I don't think anyone was saying the KF kids should walk to Crown. The point was some kids on the west side of 270 but south of 28 could cross 28 and walk to Crown.


That’s really insane. I bet nobody in that area would walk if they’re rezoned to crown. Only driving could work which would will just cause traffic congestion.


No one from King Farm is walking to RM either...


Of course, King farm is more than 2 miles away from RM.

Anyway, expecting kids to walk 2 miles each way is unreasonable too. It really should be reduced to 1 mile.


Parts of KF are easily within a 2 mile walk to Crown. KF is huge.
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Anonymous wrote:FARMS kids do not do better when they are bused.

That said, every child deserves to have fair access to a quality education. It looks bad when they have one school with a 1300 average SAT and one with a 950 SAT. But the kids with a 950 SAT would still score the same even if they moved to the 1300 average SAT school and vice versa.

I am a strong believer in the school within a school mindset that allows the ones that want to learn a separate peer group for their core classes.

People want stability in their schools. I hope the BOE doesn't go on a crusade to move kids around just because it's the "in thing to do"



Kids from poor families actually do do better when they attend low-poverty vs. high-poverty schools.

People are against change, period. But you can't have boundary changes without change.


This. The higher the poverty rate, the lower the performance. These need to be reduced:

SVHS- 49.9%
Gaithersburg- 57.6%
Watkins Mill- 64.4%

Seneca Valley High: 2023 Hispanic chronic absenteeism rate 51.0%:
https://reportcard.msde.maryland.gov/Graphs/#/Demographics/ChronicAbsenteeism/3/99/1/6/15/0104/2023

Gaithersburg High: 2023 Hispanic chronic absenteeism rate 55.0%:
https://reportcard.msde.maryland.gov/Graphs/#/Demographics/ChronicAbsenteeism/3/99/1/6/15/0551/2023

Watkins Mills High: 2023 Hispanic chronic absenteeism rate 58.9%:
https://reportcard.msde.maryland.gov/Graphs/#/Demographics/ChronicAbsenteeism/3/99/1/6/15/0545/2023

When you move chronically absent students to a school farther away, will they suddenly show up for school?




No they won't, but the concern extends beyond them. In some ways, they're going to do what they want to do. It's really more about the ripple effect throughout the entire school. When a huge portion of the student body is plagued by chronic absenteeism the impact to the school is profound. For example, using Watkins Mills numbers- 1,715 students, 616 are chronically absent. Imagine what that does to the school. Teachers now have to dedicate significant time to help the absent students catch up, which disrupts classroom dynamics and affects the experience of the kids who consistently go to school and do want to learn. There's a high number of students who are disengaged and a high number of disciplinary issues. There's probably limited clubs and programs compared to the other schools that don't have this problem because the demand is low. There's probably very little to no school spirit. Very low parental engagement. A sense of apathy among a large number of students and staff. Higher than normal teacher turnover rates. What you end up with is a negative school culture that is not an ideal environment for learning. This is what MCPS cares about and why demographics is a big factor in boundary studies.


You move these kids to other schools so each school having 10-15% chronically absent is still causing issues, and more schools will have low moral. Possibly more Hispanic students will be absent due to the distance. The people who care about education will not accept their kids being bussed to poor performing schools so they will leave or go to private schools. Then none of the schools will be ideal environment for learning. It’s a lose lose situation. Seriously this is a problem that busing cannot solve.

In fact, Hispanic organizations have surveyed Hispanic students in MCPS and found that many immigrant Hispanic students don't go to school because they were poorly educated in their home countries and could not keep up with their grade-level work. You cannot solve this problem by bussing.


Again, the issue isn't so much the kids who don't want to go to school. I agree we can't fix that. The significant issue is the ripple effect that having a large number of chronically absent kids have on a school and the resulting environment that it causes. It negatively impacts the other students, the staff, and the overall culture of the school.


Again this problem is not solvable by bussing. Bussing will only make the ripple effect in a few schools be extended to more schools.


MCPS buses over 100,000 students, twice a day. This boundary study will almost certainly reduce busing by reassigning students in potential walk zones.


+1. All the kids who live near Crown who currently take the bus to Gaithersburg or Wootton will become walkers. That's a good thing.


Name a neighborhood in wootton that’s actually walkable to crown?


Most obviously: the Washingtonian area, which is literally across Fields Road from the Crown HS site.

https://gis.mcpsmd.org/ServiceAreaMaps/WoottonHS.pdf

There are also some areas south of 28 that look like they're within 2.0 miles walking distance of the Crown HS site, some of which are also within walking distance of Wootton.


South of 28 is really not walkable to crown. There may be some houses just within 2 miles but not the entire neighborhood so still need bus for the neighborhood.


Some of it is.


It's going to depend on how the MCPS transportation department determines the walk zone for Crown. If they don't think it's safe for students to cross 28, or Shady Grove, or Sam Eig, then they will remain bus riders even if less than 2 miles away from Crown.


Definitely not safe to walk 2 miles on highway 28 and cross it everyday for students.


28 isn't less safe than Georgia Ave, or Veirs Mill, or University, or Connecticut, or 355. MCPS expects high school students to walk along and cross those roads. MCPS even expects middle school students to walk along and cross those roads. So why not 28, too?


QO students cross 28 all the time.


Huh? Have you even been to QO? Crossing 28 at QO is nothing like crossing 270 or 370; or even 355 for that matter. Get real.

There's no way KF should go to Crown. There's only one way a kid can walk home from Crown to Kings Farm or College Gardens, and that's 40 minutes using the Shady Grove / 270 overpass. If there's ice or an emergency - not safe at all.


I don't think anyone was saying the KF kids should walk to Crown. The point was some kids on the west side of 270 but south of 28 could cross 28 and walk to Crown.


That’s really insane. I bet nobody in that area would walk if they’re rezoned to crown. Only driving could work which would will just cause traffic congestion.


No one from King Farm is walking to RM either...


Of course, King farm is more than 2 miles away from RM.

Anyway, expecting kids to walk 2 miles each way is unreasonable too. It really should be reduced to 1 mile.


Parts of KF are easily within a 2 mile walk to Crown. KF is huge.


DP. True, but if King Farm is zoned to Crown, MCPS will provide bus service across 270, just like MCPS provides bus service across 495 for Blair. I am 100% certain. That Shady Grove Road bridge and interchange is terrible for walking.
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