Makes no sense. FCPS generally has good programs, so some schools have to be in the middle of the FCPS pack. It's been pointed out before that, if Fairfax were in either Arlington or Loudoun, it would be considered the second-best school in either county. Sorry that's not good enough for you. Hope your child sets the world on fire despite being relegated to Fairfax. Assuming, that is, that you actually have a kid who will attend that school. |
Because test scores are clearly the ONLY way to judge performance
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and just average test scores? They are above the state and national average by quite a bit. They are only "mid-range" when compared to high schools filled with some of the most affluent and priviledged children in the country.
And the point about comparing to other counties is valid. Only one HS is Arlington and one in Loudoun has better scores. But sure, it's a lousy school. |
Should we arrange a screening of "Race to Nowhere" now, or wait until you've got a completely stressed-out child on your hands? |
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Huh, looks like we have a lot of people cheering for mediocrity on this forum.
No wonder American Public Eduction is going down the drain. These same people will be OK if their child goes to GMU instead of UVa. I guess that's not fine with some folks and fine with others. Darwinism is at play everywhere. |
\ Thanks for that. And some people on this forum would be happy raising kids like George Huguely, so long as they get into U. Va. I went to a school that you'd likely find acceptable, but in my professional life I often find that GMU graduates outperform U. Va and Ivy graduates. |
I bet you scream at your DD for getting an F in gender. |
why settle for UVa???? Ivy or bust!! |
....or perhaps we have enough confidence in our offspring's abilities and our own parenting to know that they can/will excel anywhere - even a FCPS middle of the pack school. |
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It's not that anyone is cheering for mediocrity. It's that when looking at a school, it's obvious that a school with 33% FARMS kids is going to have lower scores than a school with 2% FARMS kids. That's a no-brainer. Yes, ON the whole (when you average ALL the scores of the students), students at Langley score higher than students at Fairfax HS.
But, you have to compare similar groups to similar groups so that your not just skewing the averages based on economics. That's what you want right? The question was whether the TEACHING at Fairfax was good... Not just whether the students at Fairfax have high household incomes and are native English speakers. If you control for those variables (loosely using race to identify students with higher household income and native speakers), you see that there are many schools, including Fairfax HS, that have comparably high SAT scores. That is the "apples to apples" comparison you should be making if you want to know whether the teaching at different schools is better/worse. |
I'd suggest that it's even a bit more subtle than this. The schools don't really undertake to prepare students for the SATs, which in theory are designed to measure aptitude, rather than achievement. Lots of kids in this area take classes outside of school to prepare for the SATs. Instead, as a practical matter, SAT scores become a proxy for what does matter to many parents, which is whether their kids will be surrounded by high-achieving peers. The people who focus on the overall averages tend to believe that their (presumably brilliant) kids will suffer if they attend school with other students who are less motivated or come from more challenged backgrounds. The people who break down the scores into demographic sub-groups often do so because it reinforces their belief that their kids will find a sufficient cohort of motivated peers at a particular school to succeed. Because most whites in FCPS come from middle or upper-income families, the performance of white students often becomes the default measure of how a typical kid who has parental support and doesn't have to work three jobs after school will fare. |
| I agree. |
I agree - the academy classes in the FCPS high schools are the best kept secret around. My son left his base school (Centreville) to attend the Chantilly High School Engineering Academy and it rocked. He is graduating from college with a double major in Electrical engineering and Physics and going on to Cornell for Applied Physics. The academy was great for advanced engineering and physics. Fairfax High School has great arts "academy" classes. No matter what FCPS High School you are zoned for, your children can attend the academies if they finish their requirements the first two years of high school (and meet competitive standards...of course). http://www.fcps.edu/ChantillyAcademy/Courses/Courses.html |
thank you for this. I had wondered how the academies work - we're many years from HS, but I was interested when I ran across them on the FCPS site. Congrats to your son on his success! |
+1, this sums it up |