Anonymous wrote:Your biggest challenge will definitely be finding space. A teacher left our preschool a few years ago to start her own school and couldn't find any space in Arlington, she ended up opening the school in a neighboring town.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hi OP - I think your idea is great, all great ideas start at the grass-roots level.
how would you suggest getting funding? I think that is the biggest thing you need to figure out first. Then you need to figure out how to get accredited....I'm guessing.
Why don't you find out if Arlington County has funding for charter schools? that way you could get partial funding from the county.
The first step isn't getting accreditation. That's not even possible with a new school.
The first step would be finding property. And checking the zoning.
No such things as charters in Arlington. They're barely a thing in Virginia at all. They have some for black girls in Richmond, but that's about it. There's like 6 in the whole state.
Wow, bitch much today? check your attitude.
I don't think it was that bitchy. If you have at all been following the school capacity and planning process, a huge issue is the inability to find suitable sites for a school, coupled with budget constraints. Pretty much all the schools are overcrowded, and they are running out of space and money to create capacity. Given that, it seems hard to fathom that the county would fund the creation of a private or charter school designed to provide smaller class sizes to some.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hi OP - I think your idea is great, all great ideas start at the grass-roots level.
how would you suggest getting funding? I think that is the biggest thing you need to figure out first. Then you need to figure out how to get accredited....I'm guessing.
Why don't you find out if Arlington County has funding for charter schools? that way you could get partial funding from the county.
The first step isn't getting accreditation. That's not even possible with a new school.
The first step would be finding property. And checking the zoning.
No such things as charters in Arlington. They're barely a thing in Virginia at all. They have some for black girls in Richmond, but that's about it. There's like 6 in the whole state.
Wow, bitch much today? check your attitude.
Anonymous wrote:Hi OP - I think your idea is great, all great ideas start at the grass-roots level.
how would you suggest getting funding? I think that is the biggest thing you need to figure out first. Then you need to figure out how to get accredited....I'm guessing.
Why don't you find out if Arlington County has funding for charter schools? that way you could get partial funding from the county.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hi OP - I think your idea is great, all great ideas start at the grass-roots level.
how would you suggest getting funding? I think that is the biggest thing you need to figure out first. Then you need to figure out how to get accredited....I'm guessing.
Why don't you find out if Arlington County has funding for charter schools? that way you could get partial funding from the county.
The first step isn't getting accreditation. That's not even possible with a new school.
The first step would be finding property. And checking the zoning.
No such things as charters in Arlington. They're barely a thing in Virginia at all. They have some for black girls in Richmond, but that's about it. There's like 6 in the whole state.
Wow, bitch much today? check your attitude.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hi OP - I think your idea is great, all great ideas start at the grass-roots level.
how would you suggest getting funding? I think that is the biggest thing you need to figure out first. Then you need to figure out how to get accredited....I'm guessing.
Why don't you find out if Arlington County has funding for charter schools? that way you could get partial funding from the county.
The first step isn't getting accreditation. That's not even possible with a new school.
The first step would be finding property. And checking the zoning.
No such things as charters in Arlington. They're barely a thing in Virginia at all. They have some for black girls in Richmond, but that's about it. There's like 6 in the whole state.
Anonymous wrote:Hi OP - I think your idea is great, all great ideas start at the grass-roots level.
how would you suggest getting funding? I think that is the biggest thing you need to figure out first. Then you need to figure out how to get accredited....I'm guessing.
Why don't you find out if Arlington County has funding for charter schools? that way you could get partial funding from the county.