Anonymous wrote:It bugged me that the featured MCPS schools were in affluent communities. Working class families care about overcrowding as well.
Anonymous wrote:It’s not just MCPS schools that are over crowded. I moved from Arlington County Schools to MCPS to teach in the gifted program as I got tired of non gifted students being in Arlington programs. When I was in Arlington the schools were also overcrowded (no I won’t name schools), the reality is everyone wants good schools and many people like the suburbs. MCPS should consider adding aides to classrooms K-3 when there are over 20-21 students. In any case whether VA/MD, it’s the county projections who are largely at fault. If a company/gov’t sector makes a false projection, they should be held liable and have to donate to a school’s fund for aides.
Anonymous wrote:It’s not just MCPS schools that are over crowded. I moved from Arlington County Schools to MCPS to teach in the gifted program as I got tired of non gifted students being in Arlington programs. When I was in Arlington the schools were also overcrowded (no I won’t name schools), the reality is everyone wants good schools and many people like the suburbs. MCPS should consider adding aides to classrooms K-3 when there are over 20-21 students. In any case whether VA/MD, it’s the county projections who are largely at fault. If a company/gov’t sector makes a false projection, they should be held liable and have to donate to a school’s fund for aides.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It bugged me that the featured MCPS schools were in affluent communities. Working class families care about overcrowding as well.
Seems like lazy reporting, like the reporters just talked to their friends and neighbors, and didn't make any effort to reach out to people in other schools.
Anonymous wrote:https://www.washingtonpost.com/local/trafficandcommuting/as-school-systems-grapple-with-overcrowding-parents-wonder-why-enrollment-projections-are-so-off/2018/09/09/7f8abda4-95cd-11e8-810c-5fa705927d54_story.html?utm_term=.e5e9a6177389
One thing that jumped out at me was the parent complaining “It feels like the county is putting economic development above the needs of students. We moved to this area to be in a good school, and they’re squished.” So YOU moved there for the schools, but no one else was supposed to do the same?
The other interesting point is the effect of the lack of affordable housing and the recession actually increasing enrollment. Not necessarily the effect you'd imagine, which is probably why it caught officials flat-footed.
Anonymous wrote:It bugged me that the featured MCPS schools were in affluent communities. Working class families care about overcrowding as well.
School officials say they’re also seeing more children from older apartments and townhouses, previously considered too small for families but now the only affordable option for many.
“Fifteen to 20 years ago, you might have a baby in a townhouse and then outgrow it and move to a single-family home,” said Jessica Gillis, facilities director for Fairfax County Public Schools. “More and more people are either choosing to stay in condos and townhouses, or they can’t afford to raise families in single-family homes.”