Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here -- yes, this is a center school. However, it's also our neighborhood school. Just seems like our Gen Ed kids should be able to go to school with the majority of other kids also being Gen Ed, rather than the other way around. AAP kids should be far fewer, representing the very top %, rather than the masses they are admitting.
DC is at a center school because our base school has no level IV services. The center school is further and way less convenient. Be happy your kid gets to be at his/her neighborhood school. Are you going to insist that kids with honors and AP classes in middle and high school be a different school from kids in Gen Ed?
Anonymous wrote:OP here -- yes, this is a center school. However, it's also our neighborhood school. Just seems like our Gen Ed kids should be able to go to school with the majority of other kids also being Gen Ed, rather than the other way around. AAP kids should be far fewer, representing the very top %, rather than the masses they are admitting.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here -- yes, this is a center school. However, it's also our neighborhood school. Just seems like our Gen Ed kids should be able to go to school with the majority of other kids also being Gen Ed, rather than the other way around. AAP kids should be far fewer, representing the very top %, rather than the masses they are admitting.
Where's the remote? I swear I've seen this movie before.
Maybe FCPS should have dedicated AAP centers that are not also neighborhood schools. And since there's a lack of avaible real estate, they could just co-opt some of the existing neighborhood school buildings to turn them into AAP-only schools. And then they could re-boundary all the Gen Ed neighborhood kids into other nearby schools so they'd only be with Gen Ed. I'm sure people would go for losing their neighborhood school for the sake of making sure Gen Ed and AAP students don't come in contact with each other. Yeah, that would work.
Anonymous wrote:OP here -- yes, this is a center school. However, it's also our neighborhood school. Just seems like our Gen Ed kids should be able to go to school with the majority of other kids also being Gen Ed, rather than the other way around. AAP kids should be far fewer, representing the very top %, rather than the masses they are admitting.
Anonymous wrote:Just got back from our meet-the-teacher. Seems the Gen Ed kids are now in a distinct minority as the AAP classes seem to multiply. When will FCPS get a clue that this proportion is completely off?