Anonymous wrote:
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Anonymous wrote:So it appears this GIS tool is designed to play around with boundaries on a map to "capture" the right amount of non-poor kids just outside of an existing low-SES HS boundary.
The options to make this whole thing work appear to be:
1) cut over entire high SES elementary schools to adjacent low-SES pyramid
pros: only affects a concentrated localized population
cons: maximum disruption to that population
2) adjust the majority of ES boundaries across multiple pyramids to 'equitize' two adjacent high schools
pros: maintains proximity, community, transportation
cons: highest level of disruption, potentially affects all not living a stone's throw from elementary school
3) low-SES high school pyramid captures adjacent high-SES high school student population,
pros: minimizes the breadth of population disruption within donor pyramids
cons: maximizes negative impact on that population (proximity, community, transportation)
The unspoken con for each of these options is that it results in papering up the low-SES high school to mask instead of help its failing student population.
I am in the WSHS pyramid and am thinking how terrible the consequences could be for a Hunt Valley family that is told either Saratoga is their new ES, or HVES is now cutover to Lewis.
This just made it more obvious that HVES will shift to Lewis.
Didn’t HVES go to Lewis before South County opened, or at least a portion of it? I was researching the redistricting that occurred when South County was built and HV had been pushing to be included in South County. It was ultimately decided that Mason Neck would be zoned to South County instead because the kids had close to an hour long one way bus ride to get to Hayfield and South County is much closer geographically to Mason Neck. However, as a compromise to HV (either the whole school or a neighborhood- they were rezoned from Lewis to WSHS.) This situation has been created over the past 20 years by continuing to move middle class areas out of Lewis.
Parts of HVES (a few neighborhoods south of the parkway, NOT the whole school) were zoned for HV, Key, Lewis. The rest were zoned for Irving and WSHS, so HVES at the time was a split feeder. I don’t think the neighborhoods south of the parkway were clamoring to go to the, at the time, new South County HS one way or another - I’ve heard some people say they were trying to avoid it but I don’t think that was the case. The original plan was to continue HVES as a split feeder but to send those neighborhoods to Lake Braddock instead, which had lost some students to SC when it opened. However the families in the few south of the parkway HV neighborhoods complained about the length of the commute, and they were instead reassigned to WSHS to fix the split feeder. You can see the vestige of the Lake Braddock vs WSHS decision with the fact that the neighborhood at the top of Pohick Rd right by the parkway goes to Sangster and Lake Braddock.
That's actually incorrect. I researched this in our neighborhood's listserv archives and the issue back then wasn't with Lewis, which was then Lee HS. The neighborhoods originally were in the WSHS boundary but were assigned to Lee in the 1980s. But that meant that the Gambrill Road kids went to HVES, Irving and then Lee. When South County HS opened, the neighborhoods asked that the kids be returned to WSHS because the kids would lose all of their friends from ES and MS when they got to HS. The school board agreed. That was about 20 years ago.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/local/2005/01/13/destination-of-south-hunt-valley-students-remains-in-flux/ac78799f-a654-4be5-abdc-ee104284ffec/
Students who live in South Hunt Valley, which straddles the Fairfax County Parkway and includes the Middle Valley, Scarborough and Burgoyne Forest neighborhoods, currently go to Lee High School. School staff members have recommended moving the students to Lake Braddock Secondary School, a shift many parents oppose because it would mean one-way bus rides of 45 or 50 minutes for their children.
Board member Daniel G. Storck (Mount Vernon) said that because there is not enough room at the south county school for the South Hunt Valley children, they should be sent to the second-closest school, West Springfield High School. The shift would allow those families to be part of a community school, he said, where children will attend classes with friends they meet through local sports leagues, community groups and churches.
"We need to address it now," Storck said during a Monday afternoon work session.