Who cares if the principal knows each kid's name? Why is filling a principal's head with hundreds of new names every year desirable? I certainly wouldn't want my kid'd principal making that a priority. |
Ok. Swanson is overcrowded, but not "class sizes" as OP posted. HB is NOT the problem. It's the huge increase in students. We need to build another middle school (already in the works), not tear down an existing, successful program. These complaints just sound like sour grapes. Focus on the actual problem and let's fix that. |
Agreed. My kid did not get into HB for middle school, but the program is an asset to Arlington and should stay. |
How is it not the problem when the county is about to spend $100 million that they could spend on buying the land needed for the high school we desperately need? It is about resources. |
HB is absolutely part of the problem when it's able to keep its student population numbers disproportionately low compared to the rest of the middle schools and high schools in Arlington. I don't give a crap that HB won't work as well if there are too many students; Swanson, Williamsburg, WL and soon the other high schools aren't functioning at their best either when they are so overcrowded. And no sour grapes from me on HB if you mean I'm jealous bc my kids didn't get in - I didn't want them there in the first place. But yes absolutely sour grapes on my part if it means frustration that HB is protected from overcrowding. |
Talk to the Taylor families who forced H-B out of their space. That wasn't H-B's choice. The money is effectively to open up a new middle school. |
What we really need is a 4th comprehensive HS. Let's focus our energy on pushing for that. Adding the surplus students to H-B (who doesn't have fields, etc) won't help. Getting rid of H-B won't help. Build another MS (already planned) and HS. That will help. |
| Not so much sour grapes as it is a dose of reality. Of course HB is part of the problem. If it's inherently so awesome and such as asset, why not allow in 100 more kids per class. Duh, it's because increasing its size would kill the reason it's special. And what I'm saying is that it's outrageous that the lucky few get to have this for their kids when my kids don't get it. And I'm paying for it, dearly! Insult to injury. |
I have had 2 kids at Swanson; DC2 is there now. Agree that this is a problem much more for parents than for students. But it's also true that there is a limit to how many kids they can squeeze in there. |
So if your kids got it would you still push to get rid of the program? What are you "paying"? The new building? That was intended for the new middle school. Blame the Taylor families who pushed H-B out and forced them too take that building instead. |
The Taylor families didn't "force" HB out. There is a crisis in middle school seats right now and it is getting worse each year. The HB community has worked he BLPC process (where decisions get made about the project). They kept pushing to get more and more, to the point that they overran the original budget. It seems like they are doing this for spite since they got "forced out@. The most ridiculous thing we are paying for is to move the graffiti walls from HB to the new site. That is a waste of taxpayer dollars. No issue if the PTA and alumni raised funds for moving the walls, but inappropriate as a taxpayer expense. And to hit on the comment that HB is already co-located. Yes - you are with Stratford, which has a TINY population. HB fought hard publicly about co-locating with programs such as Montessori or a countywide preschool, because they were worried if more seats were in that site, they might have to expand in the future. Selfish and hateful. My latest favorite entitled HB complaint is about the temporary fire station, which will have animoact for a couple years max. This, while there is hardly any green space at McKinley and Swanson and Williamsburg are turning into trailer parks. And we have 3 high schools that will easily hit 3,000 students (in buildings that were built for 1800) in the foreseeable future. Why should 775 HB kids get so much relative to the 12,000 other APS middle and high schoolers. HB is not the 1%, but pretty close at 6%! |
It costs $20k per kid to educate a child in APS. You're right I want HB for my kid! I'd hope I'd be gracious and want to share with everyone if my kid won the golden ticket. But we'll never know because we didn't win. I'm not bashing the parents of kids who are lucky. I'm bashing the government that creates this system where some kids are more equal than others. Put more simply, if HB had similar overcrowding to Swanson, I wouldn't feel outraged at all that we didn't win the lottery. Let's get HB as overcrowded as everyone else! |
This is not true of TJ. It is overcapacity, too. |
Rude AND inarticulate! Have you ever even set foot in TJ? I doubt it. TJ can hold its ground against any of these other schools. |
| Yes, the point isn't that HB is causing the problem. The problem is that HB winners don't have to live with the problems the rest of us do... overcrowding. Thats not fair. |