Anonymous wrote:Doesn't it matter a lot for kids who want to do sports or theater or other activities? Parents need to be able to pick kids up (a challenge for FARMs parents), or there needs to be good public transit.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:More than half of the immersion population lives in bounds for Gunston, especially the majority of Spanish speakers. It makes zero sense to bus them across the county to WMS.
All the folks talking about moving Immersion to WMS are just disgruntled Taylor parents who don't want their kids moved to WMS, even though they were 100% fine with WMS before Hamm opened. Perhaps move Immersion to Hamm and bump those Taylor students to WMS as is currently planned. That would leave the Kenmore boundary intact and Hamm is closer to transit than WMS.
That IS a better idea than moving it to WMS! But Kenmore is still better-suited/accessible for more native Spanish-speaking families, and also still more geographically accessible. But if we were doing ranked choice voting, I'd put yours as my #2!
How much does geographic accessibility really matter for middle school? These aren't five year olds with extended day pickups. They are middle school students who can manage a bus ride and walking home from the bus stop.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If they went with Hamm, they'd need to switch the high school immersion tracking to WL. That should make sense as WL is projected to have more room than Wakefield, but immersion shouldn't be the only kids at Hamm tracking to Wakefield. That would be weird.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:More than half of the immersion population lives in bounds for Gunston, especially the majority of Spanish speakers. It makes zero sense to bus them across the county to WMS.
All the folks talking about moving Immersion to WMS are just disgruntled Taylor parents who don't want their kids moved to WMS, even though they were 100% fine with WMS before Hamm opened. Perhaps move Immersion to Hamm and bump those Taylor students to WMS as is currently planned. That would leave the Kenmore boundary intact and Hamm is closer to transit than WMS.
That IS a better idea than moving it to WMS! But Kenmore is still better-suited/accessible for more native Spanish-speaking families, and also still more geographically accessible. But if we were doing ranked choice voting, I'd put yours as my #2!
Wouldn't that fix two problems then since they already need to move kids from WHS to W-L?
Anonymous wrote:If they went with Hamm, they'd need to switch the high school immersion tracking to WL. That should make sense as WL is projected to have more room than Wakefield, but immersion shouldn't be the only kids at Hamm tracking to Wakefield. That would be weird.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:More than half of the immersion population lives in bounds for Gunston, especially the majority of Spanish speakers. It makes zero sense to bus them across the county to WMS.
All the folks talking about moving Immersion to WMS are just disgruntled Taylor parents who don't want their kids moved to WMS, even though they were 100% fine with WMS before Hamm opened. Perhaps move Immersion to Hamm and bump those Taylor students to WMS as is currently planned. That would leave the Kenmore boundary intact and Hamm is closer to transit than WMS.
That IS a better idea than moving it to WMS! But Kenmore is still better-suited/accessible for more native Spanish-speaking families, and also still more geographically accessible. But if we were doing ranked choice voting, I'd put yours as my #2!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I wonder how long until they just nix the entire immersion program past elementary.
Nix it there too
Why would they do this? It’s a very popular program with a lot of educational benefits?
It doesn’t really benefit APS as a whole and numbers greatly drop off once middle school hits. We should be doing what is best for APS not a select group of families. Option schools in general should be reevaluated in APS.
Immersion isn't any more of a select group than is attending Jamestown, Discovery or Taylor. All those kids have the economic means to buy in bounds. At least immersion kids have a lottery chance regardless of their background or economic means.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Huh? Immersion is important to many ESL students. It allows parents who don't speak English to converse with their child's teacher, administration, guidance counselor, PTA, etc. Spanish speaking families and, in turn, educational outcomes of ESL students are strongly supported by having their kids in immersion.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I wonder how long until they just nix the entire immersion program past elementary.
Nix it there too
Why would they do this? It’s a very popular program with a lot of educational benefits?
It doesn’t really benefit APS as a whole and numbers greatly drop off once middle school hits. We should be doing what is best for APS not a select group of families. Option schools in general should be reevaluated in APS.
Immersion isn't any more of a select group than is attending Jamestown, Discovery or Taylor. All those kids have the economic means to buy in bounds. At least immersion kids have a lottery chance regardless of their background or economic means.
None of those schools you mentioned offer immersion Spanish instruction. If what you are implying is that immersion offers a better level of instruction or better group of peers, I don’t know what to say to that other than work on fixing the neighborhood schools. It doesn’t assuage my conscience to have APS filled with the haves, the have nots, and the have nots who got lucky in the lottery.
No, it's just refuting the notion that immersion is some "select" group and should therefore be actively disfavored by APS to avoid creating an inequity. It's not. It's kids in public school. And it's no more a special interest group than the parents at Jamestown or Discovery. Those parents want what's best for their kids, as do the parents of those in Immersion.
If anything, option schools have been overly favored for reasons that have never been clear to me. This is a public education system - the idea that we should have all kinds of “options” not directly related to educational need (ie ESL, special needs, gifted services) is bizarre.
There are plenty of schools in Arlington with similar or higher EL rates. Perhaps they should get some attention too?
EL Rate for all Arlington County Elementary: 28.96%
Claremont: 32.96%
Key: 35.21%
Barrett: 50%
Barcroft: 46.09%
Abingdon:39.07%
Campbell: 36.87%
Carlin Springs 66.15%
Innovation: 33.47%
Hoffman Boston: 48.15%
Drew: 38.49%
Arlington Traditional: 35.04%
Long Branch: 32.52%
Wow that’s surprising the EL rate Claremont of Claremont is slower than some of the other schools.
Anonymous wrote:Still wondering if this is a start to an end for immersion at the middle school level. APS needs to reconsider “lottery” schools.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Huh? Immersion is important to many ESL students. It allows parents who don't speak English to converse with their child's teacher, administration, guidance counselor, PTA, etc. Spanish speaking families and, in turn, educational outcomes of ESL students are strongly supported by having their kids in immersion.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I wonder how long until they just nix the entire immersion program past elementary.
Nix it there too
Why would they do this? It’s a very popular program with a lot of educational benefits?
It doesn’t really benefit APS as a whole and numbers greatly drop off once middle school hits. We should be doing what is best for APS not a select group of families. Option schools in general should be reevaluated in APS.
Immersion isn't any more of a select group than is attending Jamestown, Discovery or Taylor. All those kids have the economic means to buy in bounds. At least immersion kids have a lottery chance regardless of their background or economic means.
None of those schools you mentioned offer immersion Spanish instruction. If what you are implying is that immersion offers a better level of instruction or better group of peers, I don’t know what to say to that other than work on fixing the neighborhood schools. It doesn’t assuage my conscience to have APS filled with the haves, the have nots, and the have nots who got lucky in the lottery.
No, it's just refuting the notion that immersion is some "select" group and should therefore be actively disfavored by APS to avoid creating an inequity. It's not. It's kids in public school. And it's no more a special interest group than the parents at Jamestown or Discovery. Those parents want what's best for their kids, as do the parents of those in Immersion.
If anything, option schools have been overly favored for reasons that have never been clear to me. This is a public education system - the idea that we should have all kinds of “options” not directly related to educational need (ie ESL, special needs, gifted services) is bizarre.
There are plenty of schools in Arlington with similar or higher EL rates. Perhaps they should get some attention too?
EL Rate for all Arlington County Elementary: 28.96%
Claremont: 32.96%
Key: 35.21%
Barrett: 50%
Barcroft: 46.09%
Abingdon:39.07%
Campbell: 36.87%
Carlin Springs 66.15%
Innovation: 33.47%
Hoffman Boston: 48.15%
Drew: 38.49%
Arlington Traditional: 35.04%
Long Branch: 32.52%
You're probably the same poster who complains about APs teaching to the SOL. After all, the point is minimum requirements only, right?Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm not aware of a waitlist for Spanish speakers to enroll in immersion. If parents are uncomfortable with English, immersion is an option for all Spanish speaking students in Arlington. Supply matches demand. For many Spanish dominant parents, immersion is an important option.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Huh? Immersion is important to many ESL students. It allows parents who don't speak English to converse with their child's teacher, administration, guidance counselor, PTA, etc. Spanish speaking families and, in turn, educational outcomes of ESL students are strongly supported by having their kids in immersion.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I wonder how long until they just nix the entire immersion program past elementary.
Nix it there too
Why would they do this? It’s a very popular program with a lot of educational benefits?
It doesn’t really benefit APS as a whole and numbers greatly drop off once middle school hits. We should be doing what is best for APS not a select group of families. Option schools in general should be reevaluated in APS.
Immersion isn't any more of a select group than is attending Jamestown, Discovery or Taylor. All those kids have the economic means to buy in bounds. At least immersion kids have a lottery chance regardless of their background or economic means.
None of those schools you mentioned offer immersion Spanish instruction. If what you are implying is that immersion offers a better level of instruction or better group of peers, I don’t know what to say to that other than work on fixing the neighborhood schools. It doesn’t assuage my conscience to have APS filled with the haves, the have nots, and the have nots who got lucky in the lottery.
No, it's just refuting the notion that immersion is some "select" group and should therefore be actively disfavored by APS to avoid creating an inequity. It's not. It's kids in public school. And it's no more a special interest group than the parents at Jamestown or Discovery. Those parents want what's best for their kids, as do the parents of those in Immersion.
If anything, option schools have been overly favored for reasons that have never been clear to me. This is a public education system - the idea that we should have all kinds of “options” not directly related to educational need (ie ESL, special needs, gifted services) is bizarre.
There are plenty of schools in Arlington with similar or higher EL rates. Perhaps they should get some attention too?
EL Rate for all Arlington County Elementary: 28.96%
Claremont: 32.96%
Key: 35.21%
Barrett: 50%
Barcroft: 46.09%
Abingdon:39.07%
Campbell: 36.87%
Carlin Springs 66.15%
Innovation: 33.47%
Hoffman Boston: 48.15%
Drew: 38.49%
Arlington Traditional: 35.04%
Long Branch: 32.52%
It’s an OPTION. As in “not mandatory or required.” And not one the public school systems should be prioritizing over what is required.
Anonymous wrote:I'm not aware of a waitlist for Spanish speakers to enroll in immersion. If parents are uncomfortable with English, immersion is an option for all Spanish speaking students in Arlington. Supply matches demand. For many Spanish dominant parents, immersion is an important option.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Huh? Immersion is important to many ESL students. It allows parents who don't speak English to converse with their child's teacher, administration, guidance counselor, PTA, etc. Spanish speaking families and, in turn, educational outcomes of ESL students are strongly supported by having their kids in immersion.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I wonder how long until they just nix the entire immersion program past elementary.
Nix it there too
Why would they do this? It’s a very popular program with a lot of educational benefits?
It doesn’t really benefit APS as a whole and numbers greatly drop off once middle school hits. We should be doing what is best for APS not a select group of families. Option schools in general should be reevaluated in APS.
Immersion isn't any more of a select group than is attending Jamestown, Discovery or Taylor. All those kids have the economic means to buy in bounds. At least immersion kids have a lottery chance regardless of their background or economic means.
None of those schools you mentioned offer immersion Spanish instruction. If what you are implying is that immersion offers a better level of instruction or better group of peers, I don’t know what to say to that other than work on fixing the neighborhood schools. It doesn’t assuage my conscience to have APS filled with the haves, the have nots, and the have nots who got lucky in the lottery.
No, it's just refuting the notion that immersion is some "select" group and should therefore be actively disfavored by APS to avoid creating an inequity. It's not. It's kids in public school. And it's no more a special interest group than the parents at Jamestown or Discovery. Those parents want what's best for their kids, as do the parents of those in Immersion.
If anything, option schools have been overly favored for reasons that have never been clear to me. This is a public education system - the idea that we should have all kinds of “options” not directly related to educational need (ie ESL, special needs, gifted services) is bizarre.
There are plenty of schools in Arlington with similar or higher EL rates. Perhaps they should get some attention too?
EL Rate for all Arlington County Elementary: 28.96%
Claremont: 32.96%
Key: 35.21%
Barrett: 50%
Barcroft: 46.09%
Abingdon:39.07%
Campbell: 36.87%
Carlin Springs 66.15%
Innovation: 33.47%
Hoffman Boston: 48.15%
Drew: 38.49%
Arlington Traditional: 35.04%
Long Branch: 32.52%
I'm not aware of a waitlist for Spanish speakers to enroll in immersion. If parents are uncomfortable with English, immersion is an option for all Spanish speaking students in Arlington. Supply matches demand. For many Spanish dominant parents, immersion is an important option.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Huh? Immersion is important to many ESL students. It allows parents who don't speak English to converse with their child's teacher, administration, guidance counselor, PTA, etc. Spanish speaking families and, in turn, educational outcomes of ESL students are strongly supported by having their kids in immersion.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I wonder how long until they just nix the entire immersion program past elementary.
Nix it there too
Why would they do this? It’s a very popular program with a lot of educational benefits?
It doesn’t really benefit APS as a whole and numbers greatly drop off once middle school hits. We should be doing what is best for APS not a select group of families. Option schools in general should be reevaluated in APS.
Immersion isn't any more of a select group than is attending Jamestown, Discovery or Taylor. All those kids have the economic means to buy in bounds. At least immersion kids have a lottery chance regardless of their background or economic means.
None of those schools you mentioned offer immersion Spanish instruction. If what you are implying is that immersion offers a better level of instruction or better group of peers, I don’t know what to say to that other than work on fixing the neighborhood schools. It doesn’t assuage my conscience to have APS filled with the haves, the have nots, and the have nots who got lucky in the lottery.
No, it's just refuting the notion that immersion is some "select" group and should therefore be actively disfavored by APS to avoid creating an inequity. It's not. It's kids in public school. And it's no more a special interest group than the parents at Jamestown or Discovery. Those parents want what's best for their kids, as do the parents of those in Immersion.
If anything, option schools have been overly favored for reasons that have never been clear to me. This is a public education system - the idea that we should have all kinds of “options” not directly related to educational need (ie ESL, special needs, gifted services) is bizarre.
There are plenty of schools in Arlington with similar or higher EL rates. Perhaps they should get some attention too?
EL Rate for all Arlington County Elementary: 28.96%
Claremont: 32.96%
Key: 35.21%
Barrett: 50%
Barcroft: 46.09%
Abingdon:39.07%
Campbell: 36.87%
Carlin Springs 66.15%
Innovation: 33.47%
Hoffman Boston: 48.15%
Drew: 38.49%
Arlington Traditional: 35.04%
Long Branch: 32.52%
Anonymous wrote:Huh? Immersion is important to many ESL students. It allows parents who don't speak English to converse with their child's teacher, administration, guidance counselor, PTA, etc. Spanish speaking families and, in turn, educational outcomes of ESL students are strongly supported by having their kids in immersion.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I wonder how long until they just nix the entire immersion program past elementary.
Nix it there too
Why would they do this? It’s a very popular program with a lot of educational benefits?
It doesn’t really benefit APS as a whole and numbers greatly drop off once middle school hits. We should be doing what is best for APS not a select group of families. Option schools in general should be reevaluated in APS.
Immersion isn't any more of a select group than is attending Jamestown, Discovery or Taylor. All those kids have the economic means to buy in bounds. At least immersion kids have a lottery chance regardless of their background or economic means.
None of those schools you mentioned offer immersion Spanish instruction. If what you are implying is that immersion offers a better level of instruction or better group of peers, I don’t know what to say to that other than work on fixing the neighborhood schools. It doesn’t assuage my conscience to have APS filled with the haves, the have nots, and the have nots who got lucky in the lottery.
No, it's just refuting the notion that immersion is some "select" group and should therefore be actively disfavored by APS to avoid creating an inequity. It's not. It's kids in public school. And it's no more a special interest group than the parents at Jamestown or Discovery. Those parents want what's best for their kids, as do the parents of those in Immersion.
If anything, option schools have been overly favored for reasons that have never been clear to me. This is a public education system - the idea that we should have all kinds of “options” not directly related to educational need (ie ESL, special needs, gifted services) is bizarre.
Huh? Immersion is important to many ESL students. It allows parents who don't speak English to converse with their child's teacher, administration, guidance counselor, PTA, etc. Spanish speaking families and, in turn, educational outcomes of ESL students are strongly supported by having their kids in immersion.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I wonder how long until they just nix the entire immersion program past elementary.
Nix it there too
Why would they do this? It’s a very popular program with a lot of educational benefits?
It doesn’t really benefit APS as a whole and numbers greatly drop off once middle school hits. We should be doing what is best for APS not a select group of families. Option schools in general should be reevaluated in APS.
Immersion isn't any more of a select group than is attending Jamestown, Discovery or Taylor. All those kids have the economic means to buy in bounds. At least immersion kids have a lottery chance regardless of their background or economic means.
None of those schools you mentioned offer immersion Spanish instruction. If what you are implying is that immersion offers a better level of instruction or better group of peers, I don’t know what to say to that other than work on fixing the neighborhood schools. It doesn’t assuage my conscience to have APS filled with the haves, the have nots, and the have nots who got lucky in the lottery.
No, it's just refuting the notion that immersion is some "select" group and should therefore be actively disfavored by APS to avoid creating an inequity. It's not. It's kids in public school. And it's no more a special interest group than the parents at Jamestown or Discovery. Those parents want what's best for their kids, as do the parents of those in Immersion.
If anything, option schools have been overly favored for reasons that have never been clear to me. This is a public education system - the idea that we should have all kinds of “options” not directly related to educational need (ie ESL, special needs, gifted services) is bizarre.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I wonder how long until they just nix the entire immersion program past elementary.
Nix it there too
Why would they do this? It’s a very popular program with a lot of educational benefits?
It doesn’t really benefit APS as a whole and numbers greatly drop off once middle school hits. We should be doing what is best for APS not a select group of families. Option schools in general should be reevaluated in APS.
Immersion isn't any more of a select group than is attending Jamestown, Discovery or Taylor. All those kids have the economic means to buy in bounds. At least immersion kids have a lottery chance regardless of their background or economic means.
None of those schools you mentioned offer immersion Spanish instruction. If what you are implying is that immersion offers a better level of instruction or better group of peers, I don’t know what to say to that other than work on fixing the neighborhood schools. It doesn’t assuage my conscience to have APS filled with the haves, the have nots, and the have nots who got lucky in the lottery.
No, it's just refuting the notion that immersion is some "select" group and should therefore be actively disfavored by APS to avoid creating an inequity. It's not. It's kids in public school. And it's no more a special interest group than the parents at Jamestown or Discovery. Those parents want what's best for their kids, as do the parents of those in Immersion.