Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Who in the school is supposed to physically step in to break up physical attacks, possibly involving weapons?
Have there be any fights in the schools involving weapons, since SROs left? I'm not aware of any. How about unarmed security guards, in that case, just like my public high school in Brooklyn had.
Which ACHS school and other ACPS schools do have (including elementary schools that never had SROs)
Anonymous wrote:Who in the school is supposed to physically step in to break up physical attacks, possibly involving weapons?
Have there be any fights in the schools involving weapons, since SROs left? I'm not aware of any. How about unarmed security guards, in that case, just like my public high school in Brooklyn had.
Who in the school is supposed to physically step in to break up physical attacks, possibly involving weapons?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I actually think one of the biggest mistakes the school board made in recent years was voting to keep one high school rather than opening a second. ACHS is already busting at the seams with over 4,000 students enrolled and projected to grow more in the next decade, leading to major overcrowding. Having two schools with 2,000 students at each would fix a lot of issues in the long-run.
Yes, well you can think all your liberal neighbors for that who were so short sighted.
There was a huge push for a high school in the West End but it was shot down by liberals because then it would be the poor school. Because they didn't want to have to admit that there would need to be a boundary and their kid might not get into the better school.
It also didn't matter that there were a ton of families on the West End who wanted a high school that was closer to their homes so their kids. It was more important to be be woke then it was to educate. But that's always how it is in acps....
oh and if you are a parent with a young kid who thinks it will get better by the time your kid is in high school. They started conversations about needing another high school when my child was in 3rd grade, now my child is a senior in high school so that should tell you someting...
Anonymous wrote:Nobody cares about SROs. Use that money to get more psychologists, counselors, social workers, and support services instead of fueling more school-to-prison pipelines.
Anonymous wrote:Nobody cares about SROs. Use that money to get more psychologists, counselors, social workers, and support services instead of fueling more school-to-prison pipelines.
they should take a page from Arlington and make it a lottery entry school with a special draw. Then kids would come from all over and it wouldn’t be the “poor” schoolAnonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I actually think one of the biggest mistakes the school board made in recent years was voting to keep one high school rather than opening a second. ACHS is already busting at the seams with over 4,000 students enrolled and projected to grow more in the next decade, leading to major overcrowding. Having two schools with 2,000 students at each would fix a lot of issues in the long-run.
Yes, well you can think all your liberal neighbors for that who were so short sighted.
There was a huge push for a high school in the West End but it was shot down by liberals because then it would be the poor school. Because they didn't want to have to admit that there would need to be a boundary and their kid might not get into the better school.
It also didn't matter that there were a ton of families on the West End who wanted a high school that was closer to their homes so their kids. It was more important to be be woke then it was to educate. But that's always how it is in acps....
oh and if you are a parent with a young kid who thinks it will get better by the time your kid is in high school. They started conversations about needing another high school when my child was in 3rd grade, now my child is a senior in high school so that should tell you someting...
Anonymous wrote:I actually think one of the biggest mistakes the school board made in recent years was voting to keep one high school rather than opening a second. ACHS is already busting at the seams with over 4,000 students enrolled and projected to grow more in the next decade, leading to major overcrowding. Having two schools with 2,000 students at each would fix a lot of issues in the long-run.
Anonymous wrote:I actually think one of the biggest mistakes the school board made in recent years was voting to keep one high school rather than opening a second. ACHS is already busting at the seams with over 4,000 students enrolled and projected to grow more in the next decade, leading to major overcrowding. Having two schools with 2,000 students at each would fix a lot of issues in the long-run.