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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][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]You should be trying to get them to stay. That is S Arlington’s only hope![/quote] How do they help the schools? If they're just going to opt out rather than help integrate, why in the world should we care about keeping them?[/quote] It's like you're responding to a completely different comment. They help the schools [b]if they stay[/b], so you should be trying to get them to stay. Your attitude towards these people is irrelevant - they exist, and further they are acting rationally. This is the prisoner's dilemma: if everyone chose to send their kids to the neighborhood school, everyone would have the best outcome. But since you get screwed if you decide to send your kid to the school, and other people don't, then it's completely rational to opt out. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prisoner%27s_dilemma You can't just complain and judge people because they don't send their kids there. Instead, try to figure out how to get over the hump where a critical mass will decide to stay. This isn't an easy problem, but it's pointless to just say "we don't need them" because actually you do need them. [/quote] The problem with this argument is that a whole bunch of them on here are clamoring for more option schools to get them out as the only real solution. That doesn't keep families in neighborhood schools, by definition it is the exact opposite. We have enough option schools already, more isn't going to make these problems better. We have already covered strategically locating the option schools we have, and I agreed with that. So unless there is some third unspoken possibility out there that you're referring to I have no idea what we're arguing about.[/quote] Is it school within a school time? Let's face it - most of us can't move. Sure, some people have tons of equity and can move. Or maybe they like 66. The rest of us though, are staying. Choice would be great, but if not, we're going to the neighborhood school. And cram school on the weekends.[/quote] Didn't we just abandon that at Drew? [/quote] Good point. Did Drew gentrify enough?[/quote] We abandoned that at Drew and for very good reason. Even if you are going to have a school within a school, the fundamental teaching pedagogy of each needs to be compatible. That is not the case with Montessori. Secondly, Drew wasn't really a school within a school. It was two entirely separate programs being run in the same building. You need to have some overlap - for example, students take core courses together and specials and other program emphasis can separate out (like high school). But you need to be able to have one administration and all the kids need to have something in common, otherwise, it's just segregation within a building. We already have that, particularly as you move up into high school and see homogeneous AP classes and sports teams. Gentrification isn't the point - INTEGRation is the point. [/quote]
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