Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:'Anonymous wrote:FARMs rates and overall student population rates will continue to decline for a few reasons such as overall population decline, less immigration into the US, a desire to be further from DC, etc. The school board and its contractor have a lot of data points to put together as part of the boundary review. Hope they have the ability to appropriately connect the dots.
Since the FARMS rate is a percentage, overall population decline isn't necessarily correlated with a decline in the FARMS rate. Less immigration could be a factor, as could more affordable housing options for lower-income families outside Fairfax.
Even so, I think there's something else going on here impacting the reporting that hasn't been explained yet.
The boundary consultant isn't focusing on FARMS rates, or at least they haven't been doing so to date. Maybe that will change between now and the fall.
I'm a teacher and agree with this. Did they increase the income levels to qualify or something?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:FCPS updated individual school profiles last week to include 2024-25 data. One thing that I noted was significant declines in the reported FARMS rates at many FCPS schools this past school year.
Does anyone know why this is the case? Were eligibility requirements tightened or did some families stop applying for free/reduced meals because they didn't want to provide identifying information to FCPS given the current immigration crackdown?
Really????? A lot of kids stopped coming to school, OP. How stupid are you?
Anonymous wrote:FCPS updated individual school profiles last week to include 2024-25 data. One thing that I noted was significant declines in the reported FARMS rates at many FCPS schools this past school year.
Does anyone know why this is the case? Were eligibility requirements tightened or did some families stop applying for free/reduced meals because they didn't want to provide identifying information to FCPS given the current immigration crackdown?
Anonymous wrote:'Anonymous wrote:FARMs rates and overall student population rates will continue to decline for a few reasons such as overall population decline, less immigration into the US, a desire to be further from DC, etc. The school board and its contractor have a lot of data points to put together as part of the boundary review. Hope they have the ability to appropriately connect the dots.
Since the FARMS rate is a percentage, overall population decline isn't necessarily correlated with a decline in the FARMS rate. Less immigration could be a factor, as could more affordable housing options for lower-income families outside Fairfax.
Even so, I think there's something else going on here impacting the reporting that hasn't been explained yet.
The boundary consultant isn't focusing on FARMS rates, or at least they haven't been doing so to date. Maybe that will change between now and the fall.
'Anonymous wrote:FARMs rates and overall student population rates will continue to decline for a few reasons such as overall population decline, less immigration into the US, a desire to be further from DC, etc. The school board and its contractor have a lot of data points to put together as part of the boundary review. Hope they have the ability to appropriately connect the dots.
Anonymous wrote:For what it’s worth I thought the rates spiked at some schools in the 2023-24 school year. Overall it seems like there’s been more variation over the past few years than in prior years where they generally just seemed to climb slowly up.
Anonymous wrote:It’s definitely the latter.