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VA Public Schools other than FCPS
Reply to "Grace Hopper Center Updates"
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]I’m confused. The Langston program is filled with kids who are bullied but also adult men who are bullies and teens with children? Who are we protecting from whom?[/quote] Arlington Tech parents don’t want any of this around their own kids. They don’t care about others. [/quote] It’s not easy to get that type of alternative placement, they don’t just hand them out. The students who are at Langston need to be there and for some of them it might be a safety issue that could impact a larger community but is well controlled while there. I have an eighth grader who applied to Arlington Tech. It does not seem like this plan is well thought out and I’m not sure I want to send them in the first year of an experimental program in a new building. [/quote] I have a kid at AT and it's not an experimental program but rather one being actively built. Currently, there are kids, probably some who are 21, who are there. But we had 21 yr olds at my high school. Very few. Here's the thing. The CTE kids stay to themselves. The teen moms stay to themselves and the AT kids are frankly, academically oriented in STEM. 1/2 of them are in robotics club! It's going to have great facilities and hosts a wonderful group of committed teachers. I hope your kid gets inand that they love it. If you must worry about the Langston people, worry that they are not getting their "choice" school.[/quote] I don’t think Arlington Tech is experimental, I think having an alternative high school co-located with what’s is essentially a regular high school is experimental. Especially because they can’t quite clarify how it will be run at this point and we are getting pretty close to the new school year for them to still be figuring that out (if this move happens.) [/quote] I’m an old timer Millennial, but there is nothing “experimental” for having all of your programs under the same roof. My HS had thousands of students and hosted honors programs, special needs programs, regular learner programs, select vo-tech programs, and discipline/alternative programs, all under the same roof. You had to be an extraordinarily special case medical or discipline wise to get a full day placement elsewhere because the district had to pay out the nose for it. I’d venture to say that hosting most services under one roof is the norm in cost-constrained districts. [/quote] Every school districts I have worked for (including poor districts) had a separate alternative high school. Either way I am a current APS teacher and parent and don’t trust them to pull this off well. [/quote] I think the issue is we have multiple alternative high schools and apparently all want their own space and administrators. That’s not sustainable. It’s one thing to have a separate space for the kids who are one step away from being ejected, but I don’t think that’s what’s going on here. [/quote]
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