Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Cooper does not currently have AAP. That will post certainly change in the next 1-5 years- probably closer to the one year than 5. Longfellow is at capacity and it expected to grow. Cooper is under capacity and expected to shrink. Kilmer is also over populated and predicted to grow.
I sincerely hope that Cooper does not become a center. It's a great school just as it is. When is this AAP madness going to stop?
+10,000 Couldn't agree more.
So, what is your solution to increase the student body at Cooper to relieve the over crowding at Longfellow? Transfer the rest of Franklin Sherman and Chesterbrook to the Langley pyrimid?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Cooper does not currently have AAP. That will post certainly change in the next 1-5 years- probably closer to the one year than 5. Longfellow is at capacity and it expected to grow. Cooper is under capacity and expected to shrink. Kilmer is also over populated and predicted to grow.
I sincerely hope that Cooper does not become a center. It's a great school just as it is. When is this AAP madness going to stop?
+10,000 Couldn't agree more.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Cooper does not currently have AAP. That will post certainly change in the next 1-5 years- probably closer to the one year than 5. Longfellow is at capacity and it expected to grow. Cooper is under capacity and expected to shrink. Kilmer is also over populated and predicted to grow.
I sincerely hope that Cooper does not become a center. It's a great school just as it is. When is this AAP madness going to stop?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Cooper does not currently have AAP. That will post certainly change in the next 1-5 years- probably closer to the one year than 5. Longfellow is at capacity and it expected to grow. Cooper is under capacity and expected to shrink. Kilmer is also over populated and predicted to grow.
I sincerely hope that Cooper does not become a center. It's a great school just as it is. When is this AAP madness going to stop?
Anonymous wrote:Cooper does not currently have AAP. That will post certainly change in the next 1-5 years- probably closer to the one year than 5. Longfellow is at capacity and it expected to grow. Cooper is under capacity and expected to shrink. Kilmer is also over populated and predicted to grow.
Anonymous wrote:Cooper does not currently have AAP. That will post certainly change in the next 1-5 years- probably closer to the one year than 5. Longfellow is at capacity and it expected to grow. Cooper is under capacity and expected to shrink. Kilmer is also over populated and predicted to grow.
If you are in Langley HS district, your child will go to Longfellow or Kilmer depending on your location. When your child is in HS, your DC will go to Langley. You can see this in the populations of the grades. The class sizes (7th and 8th) at Cooper are smaller than at Langley. The class sizes at Longfellow are much larger than McLean (they are headed towards 700 apiece now). Going from Longfellow to McLean, they drop by 150+ students. Some go to Langley, some to Marshall, some to TJ, some to private (but that is mitigated by the ones who went to MS for private and come back to public for HS).
Since Colvin Run is split, I would ask at the office where the line is between Kilmer and Longfellow.
Anonymous wrote:But there's no Cooper AAP, right? Now I am confused.
Anonymous wrote:Then where for HS? All McLean?
Anonymous wrote:If your child gets into the gifted program, where do they go to middle school since Cooper isn't a center? We are in 22182- Vienna- but the Langley pyramid.
Thanks!