Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Imagine if we said we should get rid of major league baseball so that the minor league gets more attention/funding. Or get rid of the Olympics so that local amateur sports can flourish more. Get rid of research universities so that community colleges can get more focus.
This is a poor analogy. Education in the United States is not on the same level as sports. Can we just stop comparing the two please?
Ridiculous Tiger parents comparing their pimply 14-year-old kids to professional athletes? Please come up with better analogies.
Then do a lottery for high school sports teams. My kid who has never played soccer deserves to be on the HS varsity team.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Imagine if we said we should get rid of major league baseball so that the minor league gets more attention/funding. Or get rid of the Olympics so that local amateur sports can flourish more. Get rid of research universities so that community colleges can get more focus.
This is a poor analogy. Education in the United States is not on the same level as sports. Can we just stop comparing the two please?
Ridiculous Tiger parents comparing their pimply 14-year-old kids to professional athletes? Please come up with better analogies.
Anonymous wrote:Did they conclude they do not need a live broadcast of the work session scheduled for 6:30 tonight? Does that really comply with open meeting laws? So dysfunctional, Brabrand. RESIGN!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Imagine if we said we should get rid of major league baseball so that the minor league gets more attention/funding. Or get rid of the Olympics so that local amateur sports can flourish more. Get rid of research universities so that community colleges can get more focus.
This is a poor analogy. Education in the United States is not on the same level as sports. Can we just stop comparing the two please?
Anonymous wrote:Imagine if we said we should get rid of major league baseball so that the minor league gets more attention/funding. Or get rid of the Olympics so that local amateur sports can flourish more. Get rid of research universities so that community colleges can get more focus.
Anonymous wrote:Great idea
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If TJ will be a lottery based environment, how do we justify the allocation of funding it gets over and above other schools? They should just turn it back into a normal school and be done with it
It doesn't get any more funding from FCPS than any other school.
TJ gets a lot of private donations and sponsorships. Mainly because companies like associating with TJ and TJ has students to fill courses/clubs that will make good use of those donations, e.g. advanced computer equipment, robotics, chemistry/microbiology lab equipment, etc. That will slow when it turns into Chantilly Academy East. They'll still continue to get donations because of their history and because the academies sometimes get donations too, but not sure if it will be like on the scale as they did before.
TJ most certainly has a concerted effort to collect above and beyond what they recieve in public funds: http://www.tjptsa.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/08/guide-to-giving-2015-2016.pdf
The TJ Partnership Fund collects between $1.8-$2.2 million annually. http://www.tjpartnershipfund.org/uploaded/TJPF_2019_Annual_Report.pdf
They also get an extra $2million or so from the state of VA for being a Govenors school.
Another less known area that they gather resources is limiting the size of the school. The school could easily hold 2,000 students, but they are never above around 1,700 or so. They ensure this by not admitting the full 500 students each year that the school board has authorized. Keeping the student population down allows them to spend the resources in a smaller pool of kids.
It’s a travesty FCPS lets so much money flow towards a single school and then allows that school to offer a very different experience than all the rest.
Just letting a few more Black and Hispanic experience it is an exercise in tokenism designed to mask the underlying lack of real equity. Shame on FCPS for perpetuating such inequity and then pretending it’s going to go away by displacing some Asian kids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If TJ will be a lottery based environment, how do we justify the allocation of funding it gets over and above other schools? They should just turn it back into a normal school and be done with it
It doesn't get any more funding from FCPS than any other school.
TJ gets a lot of private donations and sponsorships. Mainly because companies like associating with TJ and TJ has students to fill courses/clubs that will make good use of those donations, e.g. advanced computer equipment, robotics, chemistry/microbiology lab equipment, etc. That will slow when it turns into Chantilly Academy East. They'll still continue to get donations because of their history and because the academies sometimes get donations too, but not sure if it will be like on the scale as they did before.
TJ most certainly has a concerted effort to collect above and beyond what they recieve in public funds: http://www.tjptsa.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/08/guide-to-giving-2015-2016.pdf
The TJ Partnership Fund collects between $1.8-$2.2 million annually. http://www.tjpartnershipfund.org/uploaded/TJPF_2019_Annual_Report.pdf
They also get an extra $2million or so from the state of VA for being a Govenors school.
Another less known area that they gather resources is limiting the size of the school. The school could easily hold 2,000 students, but they are never above around 1,700 or so. They ensure this by not admitting the full 500 students each year that the school board has authorized. Keeping the student population down allows them to spend the resources in a smaller pool of kids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If TJ will be a lottery based environment, how do we justify the allocation of funding it gets over and above other schools? They should just turn it back into a normal school and be done with it
It doesn't get any more funding from FCPS than any other school.
TJ gets a lot of private donations and sponsorships. Mainly because companies like associating with TJ and TJ has students to fill courses/clubs that will make good use of those donations, e.g. advanced computer equipment, robotics, chemistry/microbiology lab equipment, etc. That will slow when it turns into Chantilly Academy East. They'll still continue to get donations because of their history and because the academies sometimes get donations too, but not sure if it will be like on the scale as they did before.