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VA Public Schools other than FCPS
Reply to "Who said there isn't a North-South divide?"
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]Pretty sure Henry was over 40% when it was awarded a blue ribbon.[/quote] Barely. It was closer to 40 than 50. It was just before they lost Title I status.[/quote] Henry lost its title I status because UMC families packed into the zone. You can look at historical farms stats and see that the number of farms students has not really changed at all since 2011, when the school was 46%. It added over 100 non farms students since then. It's now at 32%. This kind of turnaround was possible because The apartments in the zone aren't more numerous than SFH. The same thing happened at Oakridge - farms unchanged, an increasing number of UMC children crowded the school and brought the farms rate down. The lesson is clear: if low income housing dominates a particular schools zone, it will lead to high farms rates. Even a little out of balance the wrong way can have amplified effects: witness how virtually no one living in a SFH in Douglas park - a huge, picturesque neighborhood with large lots - send their kids to the most walkable elementary school in the county. On the other hand, the right balance can attract UMC families and their resources in a way that can meaningfully improve the school, as was the case with Henry. Rather than focusing on changing the next year's farm rate to some arbitrary "good" or "fair" number, we should focus on creating more Henrys over a 5-10 year window and avoid at all costs creating another Randolph or carlin springs at Drew. The best way to achieve this would be to balance high density low income housing with SFH/condos/town homes. [/quote] UMC families packed into Hoffman Boston and Henry AFTER those zones lost some % affordable housing. UMC don’t just decide to start sending kids. You need to look at stats from before 2011. Those areas have gentrified. [/quote]
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