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VA Public Schools other than FCPS
Reply to "Washington Liberty IB Program - Was it Worth It?"
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]YHS and W&L is choosing between two different but very good schools. There’s no advantage to a student to attending one or the other FOR PURPOSES OF GETTING INTO COLLEGE. There are significant differences that can be described generally as: at W&L, easier to make a sports team, more diverse, IB program offered, and your distance to school will vary depending on where you live. I’m sure others will list other things. People have different preferences and your child may have vastly different experiences which would matter to their academic performance. But UVA accepts the exact same number for each school every year and elite acceptances are the equivalent. I suspect YHS does better for middle/bottom of class due to socioeconomic differences but I don’t know. [/quote] As WL rises in size to 3000 students, will sport team access shrink?[/quote] W-L is growing to 2700. That’s the capacity APS planned for with the addition. Sports teams are easier to make at W-L vs Yorktown but still competitive within the district and occasionally region and state depending on the sport. There are also plenty of no cut varsity sports and new ones like ultimate frisbee. Crew (rowing) at W-L is still no cut. Same with wrestling, track, swim / dive, etc. Obviously basketball, softball, baseball, etc will always have cuts. In sum, I wouldn’t worry about sports access. [/quote] Hopefully spots on highly desired teams will grow with the size of the student body. Big high schools where I grew up had Varsity, JV, sophomore, and freshman basketball teams. Good freshman and sophomores could play up, but it did create more spots for more kids to play.[/quote] Not happening. There isn’t enough field/gym space as it is. [/quote] That’s not true. There’s plenty field space on site. Both directly adjacent to the school and across the street at Quincy which is APS owned. And the new W-L addition included a new small gym space and a new, much larger weight room. W-L’s gym is one of the largest in Northern Virginia, which is why the VHSL often hosts regional athletic games there. Same with the school stadium— it’s one of the largest in Northern Virginia. Yorktown is the only school that really has a field space shortage given its size and cramped site. [/quote] You do not know what you are talking about. Why do the current basketball teams practice off site half the time? There is no way W&L has space for FOUR baseball teams. It doesn’t have practice space for two. It has one field. The just goes on and on. The gym/field space in N Arlington is in incredibly high demand and they won’t be upping teams simply because the school got bigger. [/quote] Even in FCPS or MCPS at larger schools, there are no multiple baseball or softball fields. Typically large high schools have a football stadium, a practice field, a baseball and a softball diamond, tennis courts, and possibly one or more additional practice fields or diamonds if the school is adjacent to a park. If you don’t believe this, Google Earth will show what other large or larger high schools like Oakton, Chantilly, etc have in terms of fields. Same applies to gyms. Schools either have an additional full size auxiliary gym, like at Wakefield, or a large super-sized gym that can be subdivided like at W-L, the usual approach for the larger high schools. Sure it would be nice to have three or four gyms and four or five baseball and softball fields, etc. But that’s not realistic, even for large high schools. [/quote]
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