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Advanced Academic Programs (AAP)
Reply to "How is Westbriar ES AAP program? "
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]Some at Lemon Road complain the AAP program there is too small and doesn't have "critical mass." Others at Westbriar complain the AAP program there will get too big and overwhelm the school. It's no surprise that the School Board doesn't do what the "community" wants when the "community" doesn't speak with one voice. [/quote] Oh enough of you already....you clearly need some instruction on how things work in this area. Basically, the loudest voices at Westbriar and other schools that would be affected were the voices of parents who didn't want their kids going to school in the Lemon Road neighborhood. Period. Just like the Vienna folks that didn't want their kids to go to Luther Jackson for middle school. It is appalling that the School Board let them get away with it.[/quote] How polite you are (not). Why exactly shouldn't some Westbriar AAP parents prefer not to send their kids to an elementary school on the other side of Tysons? There is nothing wrong about the immediate Lemon Road neighborhood (it's in a nice area off Idylwood Road). But it is a bit of a hike if you happen to live in Vienna off Old Courthouse or Beulah Road. [/quote] I'm just being honest, which many of the parents were not. I've visited Lemon Road and have no problem with where it is or what the student make up is, but a number of the parents of affected schools in this case drive their kids over hells half acre around here to get them to various enrichment programs (languages, Bethesda or BRYC soccer three times a week, anyone?) so to claim that Lemon Road was too far is disingenuous at best. BTW, Westbriar kids feed into Kilmer and GCM high school, both of which are on the other side of Tysons, so again, given that there is a bus service, I'm not really buying this argument.[/quote] There are far fewer middle and high schools than elementary schools, so you have to accept the longer distance later. That doesn't mean it's outrageous for someone at Westbriar to ask for an AAP option closer than Lemon Road. And if more AAP kids were at Lemon Road, someone else would be complaining about how the school was now overrun with AAP kids from Vienna and how GenEd kids at Lemon Road were getting the short end. The kvetching just never stops. [/quote] Still think it's a phony argument -- there are parents who would drive their kids to Alexandria from Vienna every day if FCPS suddenly put a highly gifted magnet there and called it TJ Prep elementary school. The nature of this whole center-based system is that no one but the base school families care when their local school is turned into an AAP center. They're the ones who suffer and see their community turned into something most never wanted it to be and they're the ones whose voices are not heard. As other PP's have noted, the AAP parents and their wannabees always drown everyone else out. The sooner FCPS is forced to move to a model where level IV kids stay at their base schools their needs can usually easily be met, the better. And I say this as a parent who had a kid in GT. I get it. But the numbers have just gotten too big and many of the kids who are forcing the shift to more center just aren't that special. [/quote] [b]What year was your kid in GT?[/b][/quote] 2004 he went into 3rd grade[/quote] I'm not sure how good the underlying data really is -- but I played with some numbers based on the data provided to the School Board: http://www.fcps.edu/schlbd/docs/sb%20follow%20up%20responses/fy%202014/SBfollow-up14-2-3-4.pdf If you take the total number of students that selected the Level IV Center back in 2004 (1694) and divide it by the total population of grades 3-8 (74354) it results in a percentage of 2.3% of students accepting a spot at a Level IV Center. If you do this for 2013 (and I am a little confused on estimates vs. actual numbers (?) -- so I'm going with the data on Attachment C) it is 2214/81028 or 2.7% accepting a spot at a Level IV Center. So overall it appears that the numbers have not grown exponentially, but a dive down into individual schools, in certain parts of the county (I am guessing) probably shows a different story. Maybe FCPS needs to drill down into 10-year analysis on a school-by-school basis to better show what is going on to the School Board? But I honestly do not know what (if anything) the School Board would do with such data.[/quote]
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