Anonymous wrote:Hi OP. So I'll say that PP 13:47 isn't wrong but take it with a grain. I'll agree ACPS has poor leadership and a focus bordering on manic obsession with equity but the scores you see on Great Schools reflect our FARMS numbers.
Yes, there is a weird cadre of ACPS groupies (I have steered clear) and definitely some failing schools or burned out teachers/principals. BUT there are a lot of parents who are content (I won't say happy since that may be a stretch) with their child's education within ACPS. Or as content as you can get in a public school system these days.
Speaking specifically to your questions about Alexandria High (formally TC), your kids will do just fine. In fact, they will have opportunities to thrive. The rowing team is world class, the robotics team is nationally ranked, they still teach German and Latin at a HS level, and there is a ton of diversity to keep everyone grounded. Fun fact, two years ago the winner of the Intel Science Fair was from TC. She's at Stanford now. So to answer your question, yes, your kids have a good shot at a great and FREE education there. It's worth a shot!
PS: Don't let these other posts make it seem like there are amazing private school alternatives in the immediate Alexandria area. We've either had a student there or done our due diligence, and none of them are world class. Maybe the Big 3 in DC are worth the $$$ but that add a whole lot of hassle to your life.
Good luck with the move!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:ACPS is a joke. Its superintendent doesn't even send his kids there.
And, because it warrants being said everytime ACPS is mentioned.. neither does our School Board Chair - Meaghan Alderton.
Meaghan was a special education teacher st ACPS, so she most definitely has an insider perspective of what needs to change in ACPS.
Anonymous wrote:ACPS is a broken system. I have a child in elementary and basic fundamentals weren't taught (math facts & grammar being the main ones) and I didn't get any meaningful communication from my child's school about what they were working on or struggling with. At every parent teacher conference I was told that everything was fine. No tests or work was every shared (beyond kindergarten). And then I discovered that it wasn't fine and there were serious holes in my child's education.
And the PPs are right. Superintendent Hutchings and school board chair Alderton send their kids to private schools. The issues with ACPS run very deep and I doubt will every change.
The school board's general attitude is that parents are the enemy and are there to be ignored at best and mocked at worst. Margaret Lorber was an example of this over this year (google her). But Anderson, Nolan and Gentry have all exhibited this attitude in the past both in public and in private over their years in office. Gentry has been somewhat redeemed of late but it wasn't that long ago that she was saying vocal parents should have their input discounted.
Central Office and Hutchings have the same anti parent attitude. Hutchings chastised parents last summer and told them they were privileged and responsible for the learning gap for keeping their kids in ACPS but forming learning pods. And then he quietly removed one of his kids from ACPS and put them in a private school. And never apologized for his hypocritical comments in the summer. In the few years that he has been superintendent - and particularly this year - he has belittled parents publicly. Generally, parents aren't communicated with & are treated poorly by central office when questions are asked. Of course, all of this has been exacerbated this year.
An earlier poster on this thread claimed that anyone on this board who posts about ACPS' failures is a private school parent. That's a completely ridiculous notion but it illustrated another systemic problem in the schools and in the city. There is a small group of parents who think they are leaders in the community & who seek to shut down any parents who complain. Even on anonymous message boards apparently. Some went so far to sign on to an op-ed in the Alexandria Times, extolling how wonderfully ACPS handled virtual school while ignoring special ed teachers, english language learners, kids' emotional troubles and the testimony of parents. I've seen the actions of some of those signers have taken against vocal parents behind the scenes and it's chilling. Their need to attack their neighbors, who may not be having similar experiences with ACPS that they did, boarders on obsessive. I've never seen anything like it. It seems like a lot to protect home values or their political aspirations in the city.
Your kids may be able to get through Alexandria High School just fine and I hope that they do. But the SB, Central Office and Hutchings, and these self appointed parent "leaders" have done serious harm to kids at every grade level. It's so toxic that I'll be homeschooling my kid after this year.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:ACPS is a joke. Its superintendent doesn't even send his kids there.
And, because it warrants being said everytime ACPS is mentioned.. neither does our School Board Chair - Meaghan Alderton.
Meaghan was a special education teacher st ACPS, so she most definitely has an insider perspective of what needs to change in ACPS.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:ACPS is a joke. Its superintendent doesn't even send his kids there.
And, because it warrants being said everytime ACPS is mentioned.. neither does our School Board Chair - Meaghan Alderton.
Anonymous wrote:I'm not a big fan of ACPS. However, I only have one child, and he has reading comprehension related learning disabilities and ASD. He is also extremely advanced in math. I have not found the schools to play well to either his strengths or areas that need support. I can imagine that they would probably be fine for NT kids.
Anonymous wrote:ACPS is a joke. Its superintendent doesn't even send his kids there.
Anonymous wrote:Do people not like ACPS schools because they are failing racial / ethnic minority and low-income students? For our children TC Williams (Alexandria City) is a 10/10 on college readiness and a 7/10 on test scores because they are white and not low-income. Do people not send children to ACPS schools out of protest of the poor education for minority/low-income students or because they are worried about their own children? New to having older children (new full custody of teenagers), so I am genuinely curious and not trying to troll. We are a military family moving with teenagers for the first time, and I am trying to gauge what the sentiment and reasons are for not sending children to certain schools (outside COVID).