Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does Arlington County have busses? I FFX County, a lot of kids (too many) take the bus so the drop off is not too terrible.
When I grew up, only the poor kids took the bus. They were pretty unruly and had long routes that went through bad neighborhoods. If a parent could drop off their kid to school, they did. My parents couldn't drop me off because they both worked early, I took the bus for a few years and then decided I'd rather walk the 1 mile instead of take the bus when I was old enough. When I went to high school, I always had an upperclassmen friend that could drive me and when I turned 16 my parents gave me their old car.
I've met a lot of people with similarly bad memories of school buses and would prefer to just drop their kid off.
Anonymous wrote:Does Arlington County have busses? I FFX County, a lot of kids (too many) take the bus so the drop off is not too terrible.
Anonymous wrote:Does Arlington County have busses? I FFX County, a lot of kids (too many) take the bus so the drop off is not too terrible.
Anonymous wrote: More of them live in the Jamestown district than most places. But I thought the principal's note struck just the right tone.
Anonymous wrote:You should have seen what it was like at drop off at Jamestown a couple of years ago before there was a crossing guard at that crosswalk. It was a free-for-all and it's amazing that no one was ever hit by a car in front of the school. It got so bad that the principal had to stand out there every morning, oftentimes in the middle of the street, directing traffic. I saw her get into several shouting matches with parents dropping off their kids.
I think there are fewer "entitled-behaving" parents at Jamestown than there used to be, and certainly no more there than at any other North Arlington school.
Anonymous wrote: More of them live in the Jamestown district than most places. But I thought the principal's note struck just the right tone.