Anonymous wrote:Which are the Title 1 schools in Arlington? Are any of the option / lottery schools eligible to be Title 1?
Anonymous wrote:We were about to start at an APS school that was losing its Title 1 status. The teachers were a bit worried about the transition year(s), I believe at the time it was the equivalent of two additional full time teachers/staff? The principal had mentioned that it’s toughest for a school when they are right on the edge of not qualifying for Title 1.
Anonymous wrote:I had kids at a title I APS elementary and then moved to a different non title I school. Title I does have smaller classes and more adults. But they do not have more resources to devote to kids who perform at grade level. They simply don’t progress those kids as much. My kids got much more challenge as one of 23 or 24 kids in their non title i school than they did in the 14 or 18 student classrooms with a teacher and aide at title i school. There is a reason those schools have more resources. The needs are high. And the focus is on those high needs.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:And for how it works when everyone is together. I know the teachers do a lot of whole class work and then small group work and partner work. They may talk about how you'd solve math problems (like general strategy,) and then go into partners and then those with the highest needs get pulled out for targeted instruction. My kid's class has always had a mix of English learners, special Ed (more so in the inclusion class), those academically behind, and those ahead. There's tracking in small groups, but my kid hasn't picked up that it's based on reading/math level.
This is so helpful. Thank you for taking the time to write all of this out and include all of these details. The Title 1 page at APS was so abstract and mostly included links to various laws so I couldn’t picture what a day might look like.
Another parent of two children who've been at one of the higher poverty schools. Very similar (and positive) experience as the PP. As far as I can tell, kids with IEPS and kids who are identified as gifted (and also kids who perform in the middle for that matter) get more targeted/differentiation time and smaller groups and have a more tailored/personalizaed experience than kids at some of the more coveted schools.
I will say, though, that overall size of the school still makes a difference. The title 1 schools that have lower overall enrollment but a lot of kids with a lot of needs (think Drew, Randolph etc) will feel a little different than the Title 1 schools that are above capacity and where all of the classes are maxed out regardless of title 1 status. That is a bit of the luck of the draw though and can change a lot from year to year in this transient area.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:And for how it works when everyone is together. I know the teachers do a lot of whole class work and then small group work and partner work. They may talk about how you'd solve math problems (like general strategy,) and then go into partners and then those with the highest needs get pulled out for targeted instruction. My kid's class has always had a mix of English learners, special Ed (more so in the inclusion class), those academically behind, and those ahead. There's tracking in small groups, but my kid hasn't picked up that it's based on reading/math level.
This is so helpful. Thank you for taking the time to write all of this out and include all of these details. The Title 1 page at APS was so abstract and mostly included links to various laws so I couldn’t picture what a day might look like.
did you pull up the links to the laws? the requirements should be in there
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:And for how it works when everyone is together. I know the teachers do a lot of whole class work and then small group work and partner work. They may talk about how you'd solve math problems (like general strategy,) and then go into partners and then those with the highest needs get pulled out for targeted instruction. My kid's class has always had a mix of English learners, special Ed (more so in the inclusion class), those academically behind, and those ahead. There's tracking in small groups, but my kid hasn't picked up that it's based on reading/math level.
This is so helpful. Thank you for taking the time to write all of this out and include all of these details. The Title 1 page at APS was so abstract and mostly included links to various laws so I couldn’t picture what a day might look like.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:And for how it works when everyone is together. I know the teachers do a lot of whole class work and then small group work and partner work. They may talk about how you'd solve math problems (like general strategy,) and then go into partners and then those with the highest needs get pulled out for targeted instruction. My kid's class has always had a mix of English learners, special Ed (more so in the inclusion class), those academically behind, and those ahead. There's tracking in small groups, but my kid hasn't picked up that it's based on reading/math level.
This is so helpful. Thank you for taking the time to write all of this out and include all of these details. The Title 1 page at APS was so abstract and mostly included links to various laws so I couldn’t picture what a day might look like.
Anonymous wrote:And for how it works when everyone is together. I know the teachers do a lot of whole class work and then small group work and partner work. They may talk about how you'd solve math problems (like general strategy,) and then go into partners and then those with the highest needs get pulled out for targeted instruction. My kid's class has always had a mix of English learners, special Ed (more so in the inclusion class), those academically behind, and those ahead. There's tracking in small groups, but my kid hasn't picked up that it's based on reading/math level.