Anonymous
Post 03/04/2026 22:07     Subject: Why does Arlington Science Focus have five K classes

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:ASFS in particular gets a lot of kids moving in and out throughout the year. They have had to add classes mid year in multiple grades.


Why is that?


State Dept folks like the apartments on the Orange Line. Assuming they rent bc they get moved around.


And the[youtube] Foreign Service Institute is nearby, so not just State Dept folks but also USAID folks coming in for language training (or used to, sigh).
Anonymous
Post 03/04/2026 19:59     Subject: Why does Arlington Science Focus have five K classes

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:ASFS in particular gets a lot of kids moving in and out throughout the year. They have had to add classes mid year in multiple grades.


Why is that?


The zone is on the metro line and has a lot of rental housing. Innovation also gets a lot of these kids, but ASFS has a stronger reputation online for those searching from afar.
Anonymous
Post 03/04/2026 19:50     Subject: Why does Arlington Science Focus have five K classes

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:ASFS in particular gets a lot of kids moving in and out throughout the year. They have had to add classes mid year in multiple grades.


Why is that?


State Dept folks like the apartments on the Orange Line. Assuming they rent bc they get moved around.
Anonymous
Post 03/04/2026 19:22     Subject: Why does Arlington Science Focus have five K classes

Anonymous wrote:ASFS in particular gets a lot of kids moving in and out throughout the year. They have had to add classes mid year in multiple grades.


Why is that?
Anonymous
Post 03/03/2026 10:13     Subject: Why does Arlington Science Focus have five K classes

with recent world events, expect a lot of state dept kids to be transferring into ASFS soon
Anonymous
Post 03/02/2026 21:07     Subject: Why does Arlington Science Focus have five K classes

My kid was at McKinley cardinal when there were 6 and at 20 kids each.
Anonymous
Post 03/02/2026 18:42     Subject: Why does Arlington Science Focus have five K classes

This may also be due to the neighborhood transfer option for the neighborhoods south of/across Wilson/Clarendon from Innovation in the 25/26 school year pulling from ASFS. Planning unit 24080 is literally adjacent to innovation’s planning unit, and is almost a mile from Science Focus. But it’s mapped to Science Focus. Last year they offered a neighborhood transfer for that planning unit to transfer to Innovation, and a large number of families did so. There isn’t an available neighborhood transfer this year, so Science Focus’s numbers will likely go up.
Anonymous
Post 03/02/2026 18:15     Subject: Why does Arlington Science Focus have five K classes

You should be very thankful for those small classes!!!
Anonymous
Post 03/02/2026 08:20     Subject: Why does Arlington Science Focus have five K classes

its really hard to predict the ASFS population but its grown right back to the level it was before the boundary change a few years. in years past it fluctuated a lot during the year due to a number of new housing builds and many dept of state families residing in the zone. K may be low right now, but the higher grades are all pretty high in class size.
Anonymous
Post 03/02/2026 07:27     Subject: Why does Arlington Science Focus have five K classes

ASFS in particular gets a lot of kids moving in and out throughout the year. They have had to add classes mid year in multiple grades.
Anonymous
Post 03/02/2026 06:25     Subject: Why does Arlington Science Focus have five K classes

Kindergarten classes get added and dropped all the time, sometimes even midyear so there is no guarantee there will be 5 next year. Principals have some flexibility in staffing. It might be that all classes are at 15 or they could be using their sped/ELL teachers flexibly (full time coteaching)
Anonymous
Post 03/01/2026 20:59     Subject: Why does Arlington Science Focus have five K classes

I noticed that Arlington Science Focus currently has five kindergarten classes with approximately 15 students each. According to APS projections, enrollment is expected to be around 86 students through 2030–31, which means four classes might be sufficient. Just curious how the current class allocation was determined?

References:
https://www.apsva.us/wp-content/uploads/sites/57/2026/02/CSR-Revised-February-2026.pdf
https://www.apsva.us/wp-content/uploads/sites/57/2026/01/2026.01.13-2025-Fall-Projections-Report-FINAL.pdf