Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Crossfield now want a magnet school so they don’t get sent to KAA. Pathetic.
Where have they publicly advocated for this? Last I heard they were advocating for Option B of the four maps. I didn't hear anyone at a meeting say KAA should be a magnet. Are they lobbying school board members behind closed doors or something?
On their own website:
https://rootedinoakton.com/ourposition
This is not Crossfield's website. This is the website of maybe 20 people, most of whom have older kids already at Oakton and want their younger kids to go to the same high school. They've maybe joined up with 10 other people who have kids in Navy AAP and like all other Navy parents, are insane.
If it’s not crossfield’s website then why did the crossfield elementary school officially send out a newsletter with a link to this website last week?
Obviously the select few powers at be in the Crossfield PTO have their claws in the school and are driving the ship with this website and the school messaging itself. This should not come as a surprise to anyone who knows how the PTO operates.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What a steaming pile of hot mess nonsense.
Draw the boundaries, require 9/10 to attend the first year and move one. Jesus H.
+1! This opt out/opt in stuff is ridiculous and unnecessarily complicated. Why do they have such poor execution?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What a steaming pile of hot mess nonsense.
Draw the boundaries, require 9/10 to attend the first year and move one. Jesus H.
+1! This opt out/opt in stuff is ridiculous and unnecessarily complicated. Why do they have such poor execution?
Anonymous wrote:Agreed. That said, what's the "may" in Cat2. The only rational answer I can cook up is they're not certain what the building capacity will actually end up being for two reasons 1) magnet size and 2) varying cost/affordability for different capacities as they are getting pushback over the impact on the renovation queue.Anonymous wrote:They don't need a magnet! Just set up a regular old high school. Its not hard! It really isn't.
Anonymous wrote:
Opt-in Category 1
Students who are guaranteed to live in boundary
Transportation provided
Opt-in Category 2
Students who may live in the boundary
Transportation may be provided
Opt-in Category 3
Students who live in the 5 Western Pyramids, but are not in any possible boundary for Western HS
Transportation unlikely
Opt-in Category 4
All other rising 9th and 10th graders across FCPS Transportation not provided
Agreed. That said, what's the "may" in Cat2. The only rational answer I can cook up is they're not certain what the building capacity will actually end up being for two reasons 1) magnet size and 2) varying cost/affordability for different capacities as they are getting pushback over the impact on the renovation queue.Anonymous wrote:They don't need a magnet! Just set up a regular old high school. Its not hard! It really isn't.
They're planning to have some sort of combo traditional and magnet. And, of course, initial AP (or IB) path and world languages so opt-in for standard transfers.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What a steaming pile of hot mess nonsense.
Draw the boundaries, require 9/10 to attend the first year and move one. Jesus H.
+1! This opt out/opt in stuff is ridiculous and unnecessarily complicated. Why do they have such poor execution?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What a steaming pile of hot mess nonsense.
Draw the boundaries, require 9/10 to attend the first year and move one. Jesus H.
+1! This opt out/opt in stuff is ridiculous and unnecessarily complicated. Why do they have such poor execution?
Anonymous wrote:What a steaming pile of hot mess nonsense.
Draw the boundaries, require 9/10 to attend the first year and move one. Jesus H.
Anonymous wrote:Also Action Item on November 13 Meeting
7.05 New Western High School Programming