Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Arlington has had higher numbers of students in the past. Nothing they can't handle.
though Arl didn't have to handle such widening gap between N and S schools in the past, i don't think.
But how much of the gap is SArl schools falling behind and how much is NArl schools moving ahead? My kids go to one of the NArl schools with privileged kids and high scores, and a neighbor who grew up here says that in her day, our school was nowhere you'd want to send your child. So is the school system giving up on the SArl schools, or is the increasing number of privileged families in NArl just making it easier for schools to look good.
I hope I don't sound like I'm writing off the accomplishments of NArl teachers and administrators, because ours are awesome -- hardworking and creative. But maybe the good results are just easier for them to get because their students have more advantages.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Arlington has had higher numbers of students in the past. Nothing they can't handle.
though Arl didn't have to handle such widening gap between N and S schools in the past, i don't think.
But how much of the gap is SArl schools falling behind and how much is NArl schools moving ahead? My kids go to one of the NArl schools with privileged kids and high scores, and a neighbor who grew up here says that in her day, our school was nowhere you'd want to send your child. So is the school system giving up on the SArl schools, or is the increasing number of privileged families in NArl just making it easier for schools to look good.
I hope I don't sound like I'm writing off the accomplishments of NArl teachers and administrators, because ours are awesome -- hardworking and creative. But maybe the good results are just easier for them to get because their students have more advantages.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Arlington has had higher numbers of students in the past. Nothing they can't handle.
though Arl didn't have to handle such widening gap between N and S schools in the past, i don't think.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
There will be more students, but I'm not sure that's "overcrowding."
No talk of redistricting or anything. They may build new schools or use trailers. The trailers aren't any big deal -- some of them are nicer than the classrooms themselves these days.
Arlington has had higher numbers of students in the past. Nothing they can't handle.
though Arl didn't have to handle such widening gap between N and S schools in the past, i don't think.
Anonymous wrote:
There will be more students, but I'm not sure that's "overcrowding."
No talk of redistricting or anything. They may build new schools or use trailers. The trailers aren't any big deal -- some of them are nicer than the classrooms themselves these days.
Arlington has had higher numbers of students in the past. Nothing they can't handle.
Anonymous wrote:I've read a few threads on this board about possible overcrowding at many Arlington schools in the next 5-10 years. I was wondering if someone could sum up for me what is happening (I understand population growth, but it seemed like there was discussion of boundary changes, etc.) We are currently looking to purchase and I've looked in archives but I haven't seen any one place sum up what the concerns are and what schools will most be impacted.
Thank you!