Anonymous wrote:Let me get this straight. The year TJ revamps admissions to open the doors to more URMs, is the year APS decides to stop sending students. That is a little suspicious.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This must be the triennial cycle to put TJ on the chopping block.
Having said that, if people want to send their kids to another county's school, I say move to that county. TJ is an entitlement. We do not have to support this.
Not accurate to describe this simply as "another county's school." It's a governor's school that is subsidized with state funding.
These numbers don't make sense. Let's say APS sends 100 kids to TJ across all four grades. The alleged savings by cutting TJ is $290,000. Are we supposed to believe it costs $29,000 more per student to have them serviced in a Fairfax school vs. an Arlington school? According to APS's own website, the cost per student to attend an Arlington school is $19,000. Are we supposed to believe that Arlington is paying TJ $48,000 per student to attend (thus costing the county $29,000 more per student to send them). I call BS.
It may be that the incremental cost of a single student remaining in ACPS is not very much and is offset by state money. An ACPS students in TJ, on the other hand is an expense
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This must be the triennial cycle to put TJ on the chopping block.
Having said that, if people want to send their kids to another county's school, I say move to that county. TJ is an entitlement. We do not have to support this.
Not accurate to describe this simply as "another county's school." It's a governor's school that is subsidized with state funding.
These numbers don't make sense. Let's say APS sends 100 kids to TJ across all four grades. The alleged savings by cutting TJ is $290,000. Are we supposed to believe it costs $29,000 more per student to have them serviced in a Fairfax school vs. an Arlington school? According to APS's own website, the cost per student to attend an Arlington school is $19,000. Are we supposed to believe that Arlington is paying TJ $48,000 per student to attend (thus costing the county $29,000 more per student to send them). I call BS.
It may be that the incremental cost of a single student remaining in ACPS is not very much and is offset by state money. An ACPS students in TJ, on the other hand is an expense
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This must be the triennial cycle to put TJ on the chopping block.
Having said that, if people want to send their kids to another county's school, I say move to that county. TJ is an entitlement. We do not have to support this.
Not accurate to describe this simply as "another county's school." It's a governor's school that is subsidized with state funding.
These numbers don't make sense. Let's say APS sends 100 kids to TJ across all four grades. The alleged savings by cutting TJ is $290,000. Are we supposed to believe it costs $29,000 more per student to have them serviced in a Fairfax school vs. an Arlington school? According to APS's own website, the cost per student to attend an Arlington school is $19,000. Are we supposed to believe that Arlington is paying TJ $48,000 per student to attend (thus costing the county $29,000 more per student to send them). I call BS.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This must be the triennial cycle to put TJ on the chopping block.
Having said that, if people want to send their kids to another county's school, I say move to that county. TJ is an entitlement. We do not have to support this.
Not accurate to describe this simply as "another county's school." It's a governor's school that is subsidized with state funding.
Anonymous wrote:This must be the triennial cycle to put TJ on the chopping block.
Having said that, if people want to send their kids to another county's school, I say move to that county. TJ is an entitlement. We do not have to support this.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s in keeping with the general dumbing down of society. People of means are going to flock more and more to private institutions as tracking and admission to high caliber schools like TJ are done away with in the name of equity and budget reprioritization. It would be a perfect time to open a private STEM academy in the DC area.
lol. I doubt many TJ students would have families willing to pay to tuition that it would take to replicate TJ
And? There are hundreds of other families in the DC area that would, especially as tracking and advanced math goes by the wayside.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s in keeping with the general dumbing down of society. People of means are going to flock more and more to private institutions as tracking and admission to high caliber schools like TJ are done away with in the name of equity and budget reprioritization. It would be a perfect time to open a private STEM academy in the DC area.
lol. I doubt many TJ students would have families willing to pay to tuition that it would take to replicate TJ
Anonymous wrote:It’s in keeping with the general dumbing down of society. People of means are going to flock more and more to private institutions as tracking and admission to high caliber schools like TJ are done away with in the name of equity and budget reprioritization. It would be a perfect time to open a private STEM academy in the DC area.
Anonymous wrote:I have mixed feelings, as maybe APS would do better standing up it’s own magnet program? But sign of the times.
https://www.tjtoday.org/31996/uncategorized/arlington-students-access-to-jefferson-once-again-in-jeopardy/