Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We should be grateful. Two years ago - my wife and put a contract down to have a new home built in Loudon County. The community - East Gate - was within 2 miles of 3 different elementary schools. Since it was a new community - LCPS could not tell us which of the 3 schools are kids would be going to. We found out three months into construction that they were assigned to a school 7 miles further out west in Aldie and that our elementary aged kids would have to get up at 6am to catch a bus by 7am. Apparently in Loudon school assignments are not by jurisdiction or location but exclusively on capacity. So people on opposite sides of the street could got to two different schools. On top of that they redistrict every 2-3 years so it is not unheard of to have kids go to three different schools from K-6. Needless to say we backed out of the contract. Despite losing the $10K in deposit it was worth it. I'll take FCPS any day.
Why would have to get up at 6am to get a 7am bus?
Anonymous wrote:We should be grateful. Two years ago - my wife and put a contract down to have a new home built in Loudon County. The community - East Gate - was within 2 miles of 3 different elementary schools. Since it was a new community - LCPS could not tell us which of the 3 schools are kids would be going to. We found out three months into construction that they were assigned to a school 7 miles further out west in Aldie and that our elementary aged kids would have to get up at 6am to catch a bus by 7am. Apparently in Loudon school assignments are not by jurisdiction or location but exclusively on capacity. So people on opposite sides of the street could got to two different schools. On top of that they redistrict every 2-3 years so it is not unheard of to have kids go to three different schools from K-6. Needless to say we backed out of the contract. Despite losing the $10K in deposit it was worth it. I'll take FCPS any day.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I guess the question is more long term. If the assignments change next year (or the year after), will my child be asked to go from one school to the other? or will they be grandfathered into the old school? Sorry -either i'm slow or I'm missing part of the equation.
The number one rule in FCPS is "make no assumptions."
The school board has a history of making rash and illogical decisions.
Anonymous wrote:I guess the question is more long term. If the assignments change next year (or the year after), will my child be asked to go from one school to the other? or will they be grandfathered into the old school? Sorry -either i'm slow or I'm missing part of the equation.
Anonymous wrote:I guess the question is more long term. If the assignments change next year (or the year after), will my child be asked to go from one school to the other? or will they be grandfathered into the old school? Sorry -either i'm slow or I'm missing part of the equation.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Has the expansion been approved?
Are new centers opening in 2013?
How do I know which school my child will be going to as a rising 4th grader?
Will his school change in subsequent years?
What is your DC's current school and what is your DC's current AAP center school?
There are a few new ES centers opening (like Lemon Road), but they are not part of any overall planned expansion of AAP. They were created to alleviate overcrowding in current Center schools. I know of no planned expansion of the AAP program. There has been talk of changing a few current AAP Center schools to LLIV schools since, in some areas, LLIV has been expanded to include virtually all the affected ES. There will also be some "expansion" of MS to offer AAP (Like Thoreau and Cooper) since those schools have enough inbound students to have a robust program and to allieviate overcrowding in their current AAP center school (especially Longfellow).
Anonymous wrote:Has the expansion been approved?
Are new centers opening in 2013?
How do I know which school my child will be going to as a rising 4th grader?
Will his school change in subsequent years?