Anonymous wrote:A doc titled Regulation 3355.16 Special Programs and dated May 2022
(found via FCPS's TJHSST admissions website: https://go.boarddocs.com/vsba/fairfax/Board.nsf/files/CEHHLJ490428/$file/R3355.pdf) states that...
"Each public school within Fairfax County and each cooperating school division will be presumptively allocated a number of seats equal to 1.5% of that school’s 8th grade student population (“Allocated Seats”)."
I'm assuming Loudoun County (LC) and Prince William County (PWC) are both "cooperating school divisions." But elsewhere I've read that LC decides and votes on the number of seats they'll pay for at TJHSST each year for LC's students. If that number is lower than 1.5% of each of LC's middle school's 8th grade population, then that would mean that it would not be possible for TJHSST to accept 1.5% of each LC's middle school's 8th grade population (assuming that at least that many qualify and apply).
I've also heard that the 1.5% allocation is for the entire county of Loudoun, not per school, which would mean that, technically, the entire 1.5% for Loudoun County could come from just one Loudoun County middle school. But that doesn't sound right.
Can someone please help clarify these points? Thanks!
The allocation is indeed by middle school for each of the participating jurisdictions. Loudoun has 17 middle schools at present, and as a general rule they carry 400-450 students per grade level. That would mean that the allocation for each of those schools is about 6 students, or about 102 total allocated seats from Loudoun.
Because of the remoteness of several of those schools (Harmony, Blue Ridge, and Willard come to mind) and minimal interest in TJ from certain areas of Loudoun County, they are not all likely to meet their allocation in each given year. Those seats, if left unfilled, would return to the unallocated pool.
I do believe Loudoun - and all non-FCPS jurisdictions - remain limited by the existing rule that such jurisdictions cannot exceed a certain percentage threshold of seats, determined by the proportion of total 8th graders in the catchment area that are within that jurisdiction. So with an incoming class of 550 students, if Loudoun County had 20% of the 8th graders across all five participating jurisdictions, their limit in a given class would be 110 (I don't know what the actual number is).