Incorrect. They compare school performance. Ask anyone on the South Arlington working group of 2016. They had slides and graphs. They even separated the Montessori program from Drew to illuminate that the Montessori program was what was elevating the numbers. |
WTF--north Arlington is absolutely a separate place by design. THE SCHOOLS AND NEIGHBORHOODS WERE LEGALLY SEGREGATED. Halls Hill and Nauck/Green Valley were the only places where black people could own property. Lots in those neighborhood are very small because they have been subdivided many times to the minimum lot size because it was the only way black people could buy. The schools serving those neighborhoods (Drew, Hoffman-Boston, Gunston) were the original segregated schools and until recently were still majority black. Similarly, the neighborhoods closer to the Pentagon--along Columbia Pike, on the south side of Route 50, Fairlington, etc.--were all built as apartments in the 1930s and 1940s as high density housing for the war effort and then for the returning soldiers/early Boomer generation. That is all older/affordable condos (not usually families) or low-income rentals now (for low-income families) and is not going to change. The zoning decisions for the high-density Metro corridors was made in the 1970s and at that time explicit decisions were made about what would be high-density, medium-density, and low-density to preserve SFH neighborhoods just a few blocks from the Metro (see--Lyon Park, Lyon Village, Bluemont, Westover, etc.) around the orange line versus the decisions made about the neighborhoods around the Yellow/Blue line and Crystal City/Pentagon City. STFU about the differences in north Arlington/south Arlington not being by design. As people keep saying, it is the continuing effect of racist and segregationist housing, school, and zoning policies. The school policies could be undone by making the three high schools, at least, all countywide through some system, and maybe the five middle schools, and by greatly expanding the elementary boundaries to have four or five grouped choice zones with a traditional/Montessori/immersion/science focus/arts focus/outdoor focus cluster in each quaarant of the county. Or some other model that would loosen the tight hold that the traditional boundaries have on APS. |
Are you saying some Title I schools outperform other Title I schools? There is a wide range of Title I schools in APS. Title I eligibility is 40% FRL. Those are the better-performing Title I schools v. your 75-80% Title I schools. |
Are you so ignorant that you live in the state that was the capital of the Confederacy and the home of Brown vs Board of Education and think to yourself, "the neighborhoods and schools here are very segregated but its not by design"? Oh yeah, it's right there in your post: "I personally don't see...." |
Uh, yeah. And this correlates with the reputation of its neighborhood school. Arlington Ridge is associated with Oakridge, which has traditionally been very well regarded. All that "posh" development takes place where there is discretionary income, or where a real revitalization effort takes place. That's not happening in Arlington Mill. And guess what? That neighborhood goes to Carlin Springs and Barcroft. Of course more expensive and more attractive "posh" areas develop along a metro rail line. There is Metrorail near Arlington Ridge in Crystal City. There isn't at the other end of the Pike in Arlington Mill or Barcroft or Douglas Park or Green Valley. Penrose = development, desired neighborhood along with Arlington Heights in a desired neighborhood with a beloved formerly Title I (but barely Title I) neighborhood school. It all correlates. Build quality doesn't differ from NA to SA. |
Yet those families are desperate to pay less for a comparable home in walkable Barcroft or Alcova Heights, are they? Hmm. What could possibly be different? Oh, walkable Barcroft ES 70%FRL and 50% ELL; not-so-walkable Kenmore and quite walkable TJ MS; and let's not forget Wakefield HS (walkable from several neighborhoods) instead of walkable Nottingham less than 5% FRL and any(?) ELL, walkable Williamsburg MS and walkable YHS at well less than 20% FRL and far more white. Drew and Fleet and Abingdon are rather walkable, too. Still, housing prices trail NA. Hmm. |
Not willingly. That was finally forced out of them - because Montessori desperately wanted out and was finally able to make them separate the stats. |
Oooo! Dangerous territory here. This is what ended Tara Nattrass' relationship with APS! |
If you put those options in each quadrant you’ll have waaaay less diversity. For example, all the white/higher income N Arlington kids who go to Gunston & Wakefield for immersion will just go to the immersion school closer to home. Without cross county movement to option programs, segregation is much more pronounced. |
Transportation also becomes a major problem. APS struggles with transportation now even when trying to keep kids walkable. I don't know how they'd manage any option where they'd have to move more kids. |
I really like your countywide high school / middle school proposal. Students could also rank their choices. Same for the elementary school clusters you propose—Excellent and well thought out. (That was actually successfully implemented by APS for the former Jamestown, ASFS, Key Immersion, Taylor cluster.) I hope that discussion takes place higher up in APS and that it is implemented countrywide. But your historical analysis that focuses on supposed injustices foisted on Arlington south of rt 50 is wrong. Yes, individual neighborhoods and commercial areas were segregated by design, but that has nothing do to with Arlington north of Rt 50 or south of it. School segregation by law prior to 1959, and during court ordered desegregation through the 80s, also had nothing to do with a school’s geographic location south or north of Rt 50. (You left out Langston ES. And I need to correct you about Gunston. That was a segregated white junior high school along with TJ, Stratford, Swanson, Dolly Madison, etc.) The Metro redevelopment at Pentagon and Crystal cities also preserved single family home / low density neighborhoods so the “smart growth” policies were not limited to N Arlington. There are/were plenty of garden apartments from Parkington/Ballston to Rosslyn prior to Metro constuction. Many of those were lost to redevelopment, like Pollard Gardens, but many others still remain like Buckingham and Colonial Village. That same redevelopment would have happened along Columbia Pike in the 80s as well if a Metro line was constructed as proposed. The stub tunnel still exists at the Pentagon Station. The lack of funding for mass transit projects during the Regan era likely ended that. I do think Columbia Pike could use a subway today. Doesn’t it have the busiest bus line in the Commonwealth? In sum there were a series of events from the 70s onward that prioritized redevelopment around the Orange Line corridor while Columbia Pike languished, but that was not by design. Lee Highway / Langston Blvd also languished, hence the plans to redevelop it with high density affordable housing. |
I never quite understood why Montessori had to get moved out of Drew. Now Drew is underenrolled and the Montessori people don't like their building and want a new home. Why can't they just go back to Drew? problem solved! |
I don't remember Tara N pushing for this at all. She just wanted kids on tech in early grades. |
I actually think it would be easier. Have a hub and spoke transportation model. One bus picks up all the kids in a neighborhood, brings them to a central bus depot and then buses go from there to all the choice programs. |
Montessori wanted out, and they had support on the school board. It was originally designed and intended to help integrate Drew. |