Toggle navigation
Toggle navigation
Home
DCUM Forums
Nanny Forums
Events
About DCUM
Advertising
Search
Recent Topics
Hottest Topics
FAQs and Guidelines
Privacy Policy
Your current identity is: Anonymous
Login
Preview
Subject:
Forum Index
»
Fairfax County Public Schools (FCPS)
Reply to "FCPS is turning the new high school purchased to fix crowding into an Aviation magnet school instead of a high school??"
Subject:
Emoticons
More smilies
Text Color:
Default
Dark Red
Red
Orange
Brown
Yellow
Green
Olive
Cyan
Blue
Dark Blue
Violet
White
Black
Font:
Very Small
Small
Normal
Big
Giant
Close Marks
[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]My guess is that they will start it as a regular high school, but add an Aviation or Aerospace-focused Academy as part of the school. They will spend 2-3 years renovating one of the extra buildings to bring in specialized equipment/labs for the academy. That will also give them time to hire the right people.[/quote] Here's the academic sequence for students at Raisbeck Aviation HS near Seattle. The school has slightly over 400 students, so it is feasible to have such a program in a building that's built for fewer students than a typical FCPS high school. https://rahs.highlineschools.org/academics/course-offerings [img]https://images.squarespace-cdn.com/content/v1/5e5d2de082e3c20bed5c2a9d/1612828993694-ZJ5Q29TF6QGNTDL4WEQ1/09819_00_N42_large.jpg[/img][/quote] No. Not possible. They didn't follow the proper processes to do this. The money they spent was money allocated for a new general high school to ease overcrowding through the normal bond process. It was NOT allocated for a magnet school available to only a few students. FCPS is cutting money right and left from other students. Most teachers are teaching classes of 30-35 students per year. Many high school teachers have a student load well in excess of 150-180 students per teacher. If they want a magnet school, then go through the normal bond process. Do not steal money from the rest of the county meant to relieve overcrowding to fund a vanity project with possible kickbacks or benefits to school board members working in that industry.[/quote] I don’t feel strongly about this school, but you mislead when you say they bought it with money allocated to overcrowding. They haven’t disclosed anything about where the money came from. You can argue why you think the school should be a traditional one, but you hurt your credibility with the argument above.[/quote] Money to buy land and build a western HS to address overcrowding has been in the CIP for over a decade. You keep arguing that only the land portion was "funded," but regardless all of it was planned to happen. There was never any such plan to spend money on a magnet. That never made it into any bond proposals. It was never voted on.[/quote] I don’t “keep arguing” about anything, since I haven’t previously weighted in on this. The disclosure in the last bond was that they would spend money (13.5 million I believe) for acquisition of a school site. So, if you want to argue semantics, they were 136 million above what the bond discussed. However, they have wiggle room in how their bond funds are used. What I hear you arguing is that the CIP has contemplated a future western high school, but so what? That’s not a document that binds the school system in any way whatsoever. I also think you keep glossing over an inconvenient fact, which is that a magnet school would alleviate overcrowding in the area, just not the particular way that you want it alleviated. Again, I don’t feel strongly about how this school is used, and I think both the traditionalists and the magnets have compelling arguments, but your argument about disclosures in bond documents is not one.[/quote] The school system exists to educate the students. I would assume this includes providing spaces for education to occur. Chantilly has 3000 students and new construction in its boundaries. Westfield has 2700 and lots of new construction in its boundaries. Centreville has around 2400 with modulars and trailers, I think? There are plans to expand Centreville to 3000. They do not even yet have the permits to build. The need is now. This new school can alleviate the overcrowding--and, hopefully, solve it. It may not be a large school, but it can be made to work. If not, you are going to have to bus a lot more kids cross county--and we need a lot more buses and bus drivers. We are already short on both. And, buses and bus drivers also cost money. And, you will be busing kids who likely will not be able to participate in extra-curricular activities because of the distance. More students spending an hour and a half or so on a school bus-rather than doing homework or participating in activities at their school. I just do not understand why people cannot understand the difference between want and need. [/quote] I just do not understand what makes your “wants” into the collective’s “needs”. Sure one way to alleviate overcrowding is with a traditional high school. Another way to alleviate overcrowding is with a magnet or a split magnet/traditional. You can’t just pretend that the traditional alleviates overcrowding in the area and that the other options would do nothing to alleviate crowding, though of course that depends on the actual details. The bus cost thing is a red herring. I’m just not seeing how adding a bus or two results in significant additional costs. It’s a drop in the bucket compared to some other costs for the school system. You seem to be fine with a rushed $150 million purchase then complain about how we can’t add a couple hundred thousand dollars in bus routes (if that even) to the budget. It’s like rushing to buy a Lamborghini and then complain about the cost of a gas change for it.[/quote]
Options
Disable HTML in this message
Disable BB Code in this message
Disable smilies in this message
Review message
Search
Recent Topics
Hottest Topics