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Fairfax County Public Schools (FCPS)
Reply to "Buying in Arlington Village (Columbia Pike) — currently Drew ES"
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]Unless you send your kids to the Drew neighborhood program or are enrolling them cut the disgust. In a few years this school may very well be great yet next year/ 2020/2021.... the idea there will not be any growing pains for a school with high ELL and high poverty is not rational. [/quote] Show me one neighborhood school in south Arlington that has earned a reputation for academic excellence without a declining farms rate at the same time. You can't, because there aren't any. This "next few years" blather is ahistorical. It's what Henry parents tell themselves; that their good school is entirely their effort and time, and not simply the product of gentrification, which is a huge part of the story. It's farms rate has dropped 40 points over 15 years with no boundary adjustments. Unfortunately, the potential for other south Arlington neighborhood schools besides HB, Oakridge, and Henry/Fleet, the potential for gentrification is limited by county board subsidized housing policy, which seeks to put even more poverty in our highest poverty areas. That's why this boundary change should seek to give every school a rate as low as is reasonably possible, because the rates aren't ever going to go down.[/quote] Question: do you think poverty rates are actually increasing in those areas you mentioned, or are they just not gentrifying as quickly as other areas in S Arlington? Or are they maintaining? I’m a relatively new-ish homeowner in this area, curious what other opinions are out there for people who’ve lived in the area longer. I’m currently zoned for Abingdon. I don’t think Abingdon helps or hurts my value at this point. [/quote] DP here. I'll be interested to see what the PP says, but my opinion is that a little more nuance is needed when looking at other South Arl schools. I agree with the premise that it's gentrification. I don't agree that the Drew/Nauck area isn't poised to gentrify though. Nauck has the highest rates of poverty per census unit in the county, but it has relatively few CAFs compared to the Western Pike. Everyone says CH won't be enough to bail out Drew, but I disagree because CH and the Douglas Park triangle also don't have much in the way of CAFs. Abingdon seems like the same kind of school zone given its neighborhoods. It's been gentrifying slowly in the years since I've lived here because most of its neighborhoods, even if lower income, are SFHs and gentrifying areas. The addition of Columbia Hills may not be a good thing, though on the other hand could be mitigated if they make Claremont a neighborhood school. That western pike area with Arlington Mill, Barcroft Apartments, Columbia Hills, etc., is a problem. There aren't enough schools to balance/distribute those students evenly. [/quote] We bought a new construction in Nauck in 2014. We have seen significant gentrification in the four years we've lived here. While there is concern about the schools and the re-districting, we are cautiously optimistic. We are watching closely as our oldest is slated to start kindergarten next year. With the Amazon announcement becoming official today, it may also help expedite gentrification as well as press the school board to not create boundaries which perpetuate problematic schools.[b] I think Nauck is probably one of the few remaining neighborhoods that has room for additional gentrification and expansion and development-seems like all of NArl is already saturated, and there isn't too much room left otherwise.[/b] [/quote] Except they keep adding to the existing affordable housing developments in the west end. Instead of doing that, they could do mixed-income housing. Per the previous commentaries, yes, gentrification is what ultimate brings Oakridge and Henry to 25% FRL and higher test scores and reputation. Hoffman Boston, however, has done well without as much gentrification - but it remained a small program and APS invested in improving it. Drew area still has room for much more gentrification and, more importantly, more buy-in from the existing non-FRL families that are already there. There isn't as much opportunity for gentrification at Carlin Springs, Randolph, or Barcroft unless the County and affordable housing developers suddenly and promptly change directions. One previous poster suggested there aren't enough schools in that area to spread out the economic diversity. It's more that there isn't enough middle to upper-middle class residents to create a better balance, especially when APS insists upon looking at boundaries in restricted geographical subsets of the whole system.[/quote]
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