Anonymous wrote:I admit I'm a worrier, so maybe this is just my nerves talking. But, I keep hearing bits and pieces here and there from parents worried about the ending of the immersion program due to budget cuts. It costs $1.6 Mil (not sure why, but that's what the budget report said), so there's a reason to cut it or severely trim it. I worry about having made the sacrifice to leave our neighborhood school for immersion and then it's all cut. Does anyone know with more information how serious this might actually be?
Anonymous wrote:Busing is administrative overhead, not instructional. Also, people on this board use the number $400,000-$600,00 as the cost of busing AAP kids (no idea where this comes from or if it is valid)- but never acknowledge that a huge chunk of this cost would still be there without centers, because many AAP kids would still have to bus to base schools. My ES & MS kids both attend Centers about 2 miles from our house, and would have still have to bus to slightly closer but not walkable because of busy roads (like 1-1.5 miles away) base schools. So their extra transportation should be costing FCPS very little.
School Board Member Requesting Information: Pat Hynes
Answer Prepared By: Jeffrey Platenberg, Maribeth Luftglass
Date Prepared: January 13, 2015
Question:
How much would FCPS save by eliminating transportation to Advanced Academic Program (AAP) centers for students who have Level IV services available at their base schools? Additionally, how many students eligible for Free or Reduced-Price Meals (FRM) attend AAP centers that are not in their base schools?
Response:
The savings that could be realized by eliminating transportation to the elementary Advanced Academic Program (AAP) centers for students who have Level IV services available at their base schools is approximately $0.7 million. This savings is for out of boundary students that attend the AAP centers, who would then return to one of the 49 elementary schools that offer Level IV services at their base school. Transportation costs would still be incurred for these students to attend services at their base school. There are 402 students attending AAP centers (325 elementary students and 77 middle school students) who are eligible to receive free or reduced-price meals and are not attending their base schools.
Anonymous wrote:Of course it's on the chopping block. It affects far fewer kids than AAP, and the extra overhead is the same: administrative only- not instructional. Both involve allowing kids to choose a different school for not good reason & immersion encourages ESL kids to come (or so say opponents). There would be He** to pay if they eliminated AAP Centers, but kept immersion.
This is incorrect. FCPS provides busing for AAP students from their base schools to the center schools. I don't think FCPS would have to eliminate AAP centers, but they should eliminate busing to those centers. Immersion students are not provided busing to immersion schools.
Also, curious about your other assertion - how does immersion encourage ESL kids? At my son's immersion program, you are admitted by lottery. Are you saying ESL kids move to Fairfax County (because of its low cost of living, LOL) on the off chance that they might win a seat in one of the few classes via lottery?
Anonymous wrote:Of course it's on the chopping block. It affects far fewer kids than AAP, and the extra overhead is the same: administrative only- not instructional. Both involve allowing kids to choose a different school for not good reason & immersion encourages ESL kids to come (or so say opponents). There would be He** to pay if they eliminated AAP Centers, but kept immersion.
This is incorrect. FCPS provides busing for AAP students from their base schools to the center schools. I don't think FCPS would have to eliminate AAP centers, but they should eliminate busing to those centers. Immersion students are not provided busing to immersion schools.
Also, curious about your other assertion - how does immersion encourage ESL kids? At my son's immersion program, you are admitted by lottery. Are you saying ESL kids move to Fairfax County (because of its low cost of living, LOL) on the off chance that they might win a seat in one of the few classes via lottery?
Of course it's on the chopping block. It affects far fewer kids than AAP, and the extra overhead is the same: administrative only- not instructional. Both involve allowing kids to choose a different school for not good reason & immersion encourages ESL kids to come (or so say opponents). There would be He** to pay if they eliminated AAP Centers, but kept immersion.
Anonymous wrote:I admit I'm a worrier, so maybe this is just my nerves talking. But, I keep hearing bits and pieces here and there from parents worried about the ending of the immersion program due to budget cuts. It costs $1.6 Mil (not sure why, but that's what the budget report said), so there's a reason to cut it or severely trim it. I worry about having made the sacrifice to leave our neighborhood school for immersion and then it's all cut. Does anyone know with more information how serious this might actually be?