Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:At least one of the elementaries in our area is completely losing their AAP center.
I am sure the folks living in that neighborhood have no idea yet.
If I had purchased a home in that school boundary, I would be very, very pissed.
I don't think the current proposal includes eliminating any AAP centers...just adding new centers.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:At least one of the elementaries in our area is completely losing their AAP center.
I am sure the folks living in that neighborhood have no idea yet.
If I had purchased a home in that school boundary, I would be very, very pissed.
Which school? Is an AAP center that big of a draw? As a parent whose kid is in aap at our base school, I wouldn't mind losing our center, it would mean a lot less overcrowding
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Have you thought about the possibility that having an AAP center at Whitman might lead to the enrollment of more children in the Local Level IV center or entice more parents who care about education to Mount Vernon feeder schools?
Enrollment in Local Level IV centers is handled by the school principal, not FCPS central office staff.
Not really. Center eligible kids can go to center or LLIV (or stay in base) at their discretion. In some cases, the principle can fill out the class with non-center eligible kids to balance things out.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Have you thought about the possibility that having an AAP center at Whitman might lead to the enrollment of more children in the Local Level IV center or entice more parents who care about education to Mount Vernon feeder schools?
Enrollment in Local Level IV centers is handled by the school principal, not FCPS central office staff.
Anonymous wrote:FCPS is trying to stay ahead of the Deaprtment of Education, which agreed there was sufficient evidence of disparate access among black and Hispanic students to AAP services in Fairfax to investigate further.
Anonymous wrote:At least one of the elementaries in our area is completely losing their AAP center.
I am sure the folks living in that neighborhood have no idea yet.
If I had purchased a home in that school boundary, I would be very, very pissed.
Anonymous wrote:
Have you thought about the possibility that having an AAP center at Whitman might lead to the enrollment of more children in the Local Level IV center or entice more parents who care about education to Mount Vernon feeder schools?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They are proposing AAP Centers in the 14 that don't have them. I'm not sure if this means the 14 pyramids that don't have the chance to go to an AAP middle school, or the 14 middle schools that don't offer AAP level classes?
It means an AAP Center at every middle school. So for middle schools that have no AAP Center, the students at the feeder elementary schools would not go to the assigned AAP Center any longer but would go to the new AAP Center at their base middle school.
For example, see the chart posted by centers and feeder schools:
http://www.fcag.org/documents/level_iv_task_force_recs/aap_enr_by_ctr_fdr.pdf
So the 16 6th grade Center-eligible students in the Mount Vernon pyramid would attend the new AAP Center at Whitman MS instead of attending Sandburg MS' AAP Center.
Fort Belvoir: 3
Mount Vernon Woods: 2
Riverside: 6
Washington Mill: 1
Woodlawn: 3
Woodley Hills: 1
Anonymous wrote:At least one of the elementaries in our area is completely losing their AAP center.
I am sure the folks living in that neighborhood have no idea yet.
If I had purchased a home in that school boundary, I would be very, very pissed.
Anonymous wrote:They are proposing AAP Centers in the 14 that don't have them. I'm not sure if this means the 14 pyramids that don't have the chance to go to an AAP middle school, or the 14 middle schools that don't offer AAP level classes?