Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This absolutely varies by school and there is no blanket truth on which ratio will be better/smaller - your local or center. You have to name schools to find out.
I think you can make a blanket statement that LIV will never be significantly smaller
Depends what you consider significant I guess. When your gen ed is max class size and your LIV is just over so gets split in 2, to me that is significantly smaller.
It can work this way for GenEd too. In our center school, the 3 AAP classes in my kid’s grade last yr each had 28/29 students and GenEd all had 20. It really just depends on numbers and the same rules for maxing out and adding another teacher apply to AAP and GenEd
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This absolutely varies by school and there is no blanket truth on which ratio will be better/smaller - your local or center. You have to name schools to find out.
I think you can make a blanket statement that LIV will never be significantly smaller
Depends what you consider significant I guess. When your gen ed is max class size and your LIV is just over so gets split in 2, to me that is significantly smaller.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This absolutely varies by school and there is no blanket truth on which ratio will be better/smaller - your local or center. You have to name schools to find out.
I think you can make a blanket statement that LIV will never be significantly smaller
Anonymous wrote:This absolutely varies by school and there is no blanket truth on which ratio will be better/smaller - your local or center. You have to name schools to find out.