Anonymous wrote:
No, Brown Station goes through 5th grade.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was actually impressed by the immersion program there. You can certainly get by not knowing Spanish, though it helps if you do. The staff and families are very much engaged and supportive. The new-ish principal is very much on top of things and she knows what she's doing.
That’s great to hear! Our son will have to start from the first grade though and I wonder whether that would be an extra setback for him. I just saw a post showing Brown Station as K-2, is that true? Where do the kids go afterwards then?
Anonymous wrote:I was actually impressed by the immersion program there. You can certainly get by not knowing Spanish, though it helps if you do. The staff and families are very much engaged and supportive. The new-ish principal is very much on top of things and she knows what she's doing.
Anonymous wrote:Many hispanic families enrollment are there like 80%? , and I think they are Title 1 school ( all free meals). Many announcement are in bilingual (English/Spanish). I am not hispanic, and I feel weird if I enroll my kid being there. I am immigrant, and I feel weird to have to learn another language there.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They built a new building last year, so they are not overcrowded. There's also a full Spanish immersion for the whole school, there's no need to apply to get in it,this is a new program that was instituted last year with the opening of the new school. They are also title 1 and from what I heard of some parents who have kids there, the instruction is really good, and it seems they have good amount of funding to meet the school's needs. There are also classes for advance students. Teacher moral apparently improved after they moved in to the new school. If you are interested, you should probably do a tour around the school, I haven't been there myself but I heard good things. They also have a program for incoming K, where they can attend a class before the schools starts( kinda like a summer camp, to get the kids oriented, but this is all free. I've honestly never heard of any other school with so much to offer without additional cost.
It's going to be a two-way immersion program (like they currently have at Kemp Mill), not full immersion. Meaning they switch back and forth between English and Spanish instruction.
Anonymous wrote:They built a new building last year, so they are not overcrowded. There's also a full Spanish immersion for the whole school, there's no need to apply to get in it,this is a new program that was instituted last year with the opening of the new school. They are also title 1 and from what I heard of some parents who have kids there, the instruction is really good, and it seems they have good amount of funding to meet the school's needs. There are also classes for advance students. Teacher moral apparently improved after they moved in to the new school. If you are interested, you should probably do a tour around the school, I haven't been there myself but I heard good things. They also have a program for incoming K, where they can attend a class before the schools starts( kinda like a summer camp, to get the kids oriented, but this is all free. I've honestly never heard of any other school with so much to offer without additional cost.