Apparently equity doesn’t matter when facilities are involved. How else do you explain Mclean high school? I really wish Mclean would form a township, split from FFX county and take their tax dollars with them. |
Read what you wrote, logically doesn't that all make the most sense? Also FCPS has been a 2 tier system for at least a decade. |
That's not going to happen, and there's more to a school that the quality of its facilities. When FCPS last published the results of teacher satisfaction surveys, the two schools with the highest overall teacher satisfaction were McLean and Falls Church, which happened to be two of the schools with the oldest facilities. Most likely they will publish a new renovation queue before the fall 2023 School Board elections. If they don't, the Democrats will take a hit at the polls. |
From a policy perspective, it makes sense if you're OK further increasing the gap between the top and bottom neighborhood high schools, but creating an off-ramp to TJ for a few more kids at the lowest-performing neighborhood schools. What does that do for the other 98% of the kids at Poe or Whitman? |
Agree 95% - still stuck on the Geometry requirement. ![]() |
You are projecting big time. Teacher opinions about one math class <> conclusive evidence about anything |
I don't "hate" any middle school and I don't think anyone is trying to "stick it to" anyone. It's not about you. Our community would love to see less opportunity hoarding by a small group of parents who have figured out the specific steps required to game the system and the community would love to increase access for more of the community. |
We can agree that we do not want opportunity hoarding by a small group of parents who have figured out how to game the system. The previous system was broken. The "reform" unfortunately excludes truly deserving kids from feeder schools with parents who are all on the straight and the narrow. They have approached the admissions process the way it should be approached but there is no way for them to succeed. And that is nota acceptable. The School Board is throwing the baby out with the bathwater. Any time a concerned parent tries to speak up, they are drowned out by chants that all preppers are cheats. And that is the crux of the issue. This is not an issue between preppers/gamers at the feeder schools and the under-represented schools. That is an easy one to resolve. This is an issue between the truly deserving STEM students at feeder schools and the process that does not give them an opportunity. These kids also come from tax paying households and deserve a fair shake. |
While it's possible that phrases like "opportunity hoarding" and "gam[ing] the system" are your love language, that seems unlikely. |
Great. It sounds like everyone - aside from the cheaters/preppers who continue to push irrational claims - can work together to come up to tweak the current process to identify the best candidates from across the county. |
I think you have an exaggerated sense of who is invested in TJ and the extent to which they are invested. It's not the only game in town. Mess around with it too much and people look elsewhere. |
I am so glad someone actually gets it. I understand that old system is broken and needs to be fixed. But, it is fixed in a wrong way. Now the so called preppers realized how much of a weightage essays have and are getting their kids prepared for essays with exclusive classes, one-on-one writing coaches etc. When it comes to TJ, I would rather have people prepare for math/science than essays. Also, when you see center kids with perfect or near perfect grades, 5 to 6 stem electives, lots of participation both school sponsored (and outside?) stem activities/achievements don't get selected while random kids who neither have grades, nor the advanced math (at the center, even being in AAP) or any stem interest to show for get selected, you know the system is broken to the point that its depressing to the kids. You can argue all you want about public schools need to be provided for everyone, which no one denies, but you need to understand that the new system, for whatever the merits its supposed to have is not working as expected and sacrificed the talent in the name diversity, which was never really achieved to begin with. There is some poster (on this thread or other) who provided a 10 or 11 point selection criteria which should alleviate everybody's concerns and if a random poster can come up with such a comprehensive list in few min, how come the fcps board, with all its merits can come up with such a dumb process with full of holes from the very start and even some of their own members had concerns. Sorry for the rant! |
Most of the problems would be fixed if schools had better leeway in picking their own top 1.5% it seems. |
Vocal pro-reform here - and I agree with you. Teacher recommendations that require teachers to compare students to one another would go a long way to ensuring that the kids who can have the most positive impact on the TJ environment are the ones who are selected. |
My kids friend, who has been in AAP, couldn't get into algebra I in 7th, got few B+, A-s, got in to TJ, has wealth/educated parents, openly admitted to friends that he lied about all sorts of things on the portrait sheet as he and his parents know there is not going to be validation of anything they claim in the essays. May be this other kid is better at articulating things, but there is no way this kid should be preferred over a straight A students from the same school with demonstrable stem achievements, just based on few less than perfect lines in an essay. There are few that defend the new process to death, probably never didn't have their kids go through such unexpected rejections.
I had a friend who criticized so much about insurance companies covering for pre-existing conditions, how it gets expensive for everyone, country will break down, blah blah, but once someone in the family diagnosed with a serious medical condition, realized that it could happen to anyone. So, no one realizes until it hurts. The old process is bad, but new process is far worse. |