Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
This is important to remember: transferring into IB (supposedly) requires you to take full IB. No picky-choosey like kids zoned for WL. This is a policy, IMO, APS needs to change.
NP whose Yorktown-zoned child wants to apply for IB next year. How would you change it? Either let the YT/Wakefield kids stay even if they don't do full IB, or make it so W-L kids can't dabble in IB, they either do it or not?
I would change it so they either do it or don't, same as everyone, since it's a program within a school. Letting everyone dabble in it, just defeats the purpose. But who will make this change?
Letting people "dabble" actually helps the program because they can offer a wider range of IB electives. If they limited access to only diploma students they would have electives with only a few students signing up and then they wouldn't offer them.
I believe that due to the extremely large number of high school students in this county, and the popularity of the IB program, they would easily fill, if they asked students to fully commit (perhaps at the latest by the start of grade 10) and decide to be "in or out".
I agree. If IB were established as its own option program, the typical high-pressure-expectations Arlington parents would be all over it like they are HBW. It would become an elite option school. But on second thought as I write this, the major obstacle to that happening would be the lack of extracurriculars. Parents expect their kids to be able to do and have it all. Separating IB from WL per se would disconnect their students from WL athletics. That's one of the problems Arlington Tech has now - students want to do activities AT doesn't offer (band) and it's too much of a hassle to go back to the home school for sports.
I don’t think APS is too keen on creating elite option schools. HBW became one due to its small size, but that wasn’t on purpose. Arlington Tech was purposefully not designed as an elite STEM school with admissions testing. A small elite IB option school would likely create division between the “dregs of humanity” at the neighborhood schools and the highly motivated academic stars at the elite IB option school. Also, would a small IB option school be able to offer the same number of IB electives?
Don't know and don't care. So what if the # of electives goes down? They still have their IB program and diploma. Option programs are choices and choices just might mean "choosing" to do without something else.
There's no point in creating this elite school if it doesn't attract a sizable number if kids away from the more crowded schools.
I think some PPs here overestimate the interest in the IB diploma. It is A LOT of work and the number of kids who actually complete the diploma isn't actually that large.
I'm not advocating for an IB program. I'm just saying that if it's going to be offered, it should be its own, actual IB program. If there isn't enough interest to sustain one, don't establish one; or try and if it doesn't draw enough, then eliminate it. Considering there are only approximately 60 IB diplomas issued in a given year, I think the program should be on "table 1" for budget cuts. Thousands of students across the country manage to get in and graduate from fine universities without an IB diploma and even without a single IB class. [b]The way IB is offered in APS is (1) inequitable and (2) not consistent with the actual IB program/curriculum.
There’s no requirement for schools to offer the IB Middle Years Programme to become an IB school. W-L has maintained one of the region’s most successful high school IB programs for 25 years. The schools new addition is allowing all eligible applicants an IB spot at W-L, and perhaps the W-L boundary should further shrink as needed to allow for continued access to all eligible students. Would it be equitable for IB to become an elite option program within W-L like Richard Montgomery HS in Rockville, closed to in-bounds W-L students? I don’t know.
But for now the W-L addition is meeting the needs of both IB and in-bounds neighborhood kids. In 5 years if enrollment continues upward in the south of the county unabated, then IB, HB, and other option programs might be up for debate. But as of now, no one is calling for changes.
This is the problem! It is serving "in-bounds neighborhood kids." IB should absolutely not become "an elite program" within WL that's open only to WL students. That's the whole point I've been trying to make. I don't care where they house the program. If they're going to offer it, it should be a full-time IB program consisting only of full-time IB students from across the county. It should NOT be open to the general WL populace (ie "serve in-bounds neighborhood kids") to take a few classes from in order to enhance their college applications - unless any high school student in any of the other high schools have that same access. My initial use of "elite" was not meant to describe the program, but to suggest how it would be viewed by Arlington parents always seeking the best for their genius children....like how people describe HBW as an "elite" program because it's small and highly coveted.
I don't think this is a problem. At least, unlike HB, if you really want your kid to go there (but you don't want them to do the full diploma or you don't get in through the lottery), you can move in bounds.
But I don't see many people actually complaining about this. I think this is a made up "issue."
I agree. It’s not really an issue apart from a few people on this forum claiming it’s not fair and that Yorktown should have better stats than W-L etc. Moreover maybe it’s good that some of the most disadvantaged kids in the metro area (who represent a large number of in-bounds W-L students) are exposed to highly motivated students on a daily basis at school, and that they can aspire to take on challenging coursework as they are able. That’s actually an argument for equity right there.
Wow, way to justify your extra benefits at W-L, blame the people who don't have it and call them whiners. Well done!!!
If you care that much about your kids taking IB classes then make sure they take the prerequisites and apply. Virtually everyone gets off the waitlist and now with the additional 600 seats it’s even more likely. No one is forced to transfer back to their zoned HS if they don’t do full IB as long as they take a bare minimum of IB classes.
+1
Really not seeing the issue here, unless a kid only wants to take just 1-2 IB classes?
Is this policy new? Because back when my kid had to apply, the policy was you had stay in full IB or go back to your home school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
This is important to remember: transferring into IB (supposedly) requires you to take full IB. No picky-choosey like kids zoned for WL. This is a policy, IMO, APS needs to change.
NP whose Yorktown-zoned child wants to apply for IB next year. How would you change it? Either let the YT/Wakefield kids stay even if they don't do full IB, or make it so W-L kids can't dabble in IB, they either do it or not?
I would change it so they either do it or don't, same as everyone, since it's a program within a school. Letting everyone dabble in it, just defeats the purpose. But who will make this change?
Letting people "dabble" actually helps the program because they can offer a wider range of IB electives. If they limited access to only diploma students they would have electives with only a few students signing up and then they wouldn't offer them.
I believe that due to the extremely large number of high school students in this county, and the popularity of the IB program, they would easily fill, if they asked students to fully commit (perhaps at the latest by the start of grade 10) and decide to be "in or out".
I agree. If IB were established as its own option program, the typical high-pressure-expectations Arlington parents would be all over it like they are HBW. It would become an elite option school. But on second thought as I write this, the major obstacle to that happening would be the lack of extracurriculars. Parents expect their kids to be able to do and have it all. Separating IB from WL per se would disconnect their students from WL athletics. That's one of the problems Arlington Tech has now - students want to do activities AT doesn't offer (band) and it's too much of a hassle to go back to the home school for sports.
I don’t think APS is too keen on creating elite option schools. HBW became one due to its small size, but that wasn’t on purpose. Arlington Tech was purposefully not designed as an elite STEM school with admissions testing. A small elite IB option school would likely create division between the “dregs of humanity” at the neighborhood schools and the highly motivated academic stars at the elite IB option school. Also, would a small IB option school be able to offer the same number of IB electives?
Don't know and don't care. So what if the # of electives goes down? They still have their IB program and diploma. Option programs are choices and choices just might mean "choosing" to do without something else.
There's no point in creating this elite school if it doesn't attract a sizable number if kids away from the more crowded schools.
I think some PPs here overestimate the interest in the IB diploma. It is A LOT of work and the number of kids who actually complete the diploma isn't actually that large.
I'm not advocating for an IB program. I'm just saying that if it's going to be offered, it should be its own, actual IB program. If there isn't enough interest to sustain one, don't establish one; or try and if it doesn't draw enough, then eliminate it. Considering there are only approximately 60 IB diplomas issued in a given year, I think the program should be on "table 1" for budget cuts. Thousands of students across the country manage to get in and graduate from fine universities without an IB diploma and even without a single IB class. [b]The way IB is offered in APS is (1) inequitable and (2) not consistent with the actual IB program/curriculum.
There’s no requirement for schools to offer the IB Middle Years Programme to become an IB school. W-L has maintained one of the region’s most successful high school IB programs for 25 years. The schools new addition is allowing all eligible applicants an IB spot at W-L, and perhaps the W-L boundary should further shrink as needed to allow for continued access to all eligible students. Would it be equitable for IB to become an elite option program within W-L like Richard Montgomery HS in Rockville, closed to in-bounds W-L students? I don’t know.
But for now the W-L addition is meeting the needs of both IB and in-bounds neighborhood kids. In 5 years if enrollment continues upward in the south of the county unabated, then IB, HB, and other option programs might be up for debate. But as of now, no one is calling for changes.
This is the problem! It is serving "in-bounds neighborhood kids." IB should absolutely not become "an elite program" within WL that's open only to WL students. That's the whole point I've been trying to make. I don't care where they house the program. If they're going to offer it, it should be a full-time IB program consisting only of full-time IB students from across the county. It should NOT be open to the general WL populace (ie "serve in-bounds neighborhood kids") to take a few classes from in order to enhance their college applications - unless any high school student in any of the other high schools have that same access. My initial use of "elite" was not meant to describe the program, but to suggest how it would be viewed by Arlington parents always seeking the best for their genius children....like how people describe HBW as an "elite" program because it's small and highly coveted.
I don't think this is a problem. At least, unlike HB, if you really want your kid to go there (but you don't want them to do the full diploma or you don't get in through the lottery), you can move in bounds.
But I don't see many people actually complaining about this. I think this is a made up "issue."
I agree. It’s not really an issue apart from a few people on this forum claiming it’s not fair and that Yorktown should have better stats than W-L etc. Moreover maybe it’s good that some of the most disadvantaged kids in the metro area (who represent a large number of in-bounds W-L students) are exposed to highly motivated students on a daily basis at school, and that they can aspire to take on challenging coursework as they are able. That’s actually an argument for equity right there.
Wow, way to justify your extra benefits at W-L, blame the people who don't have it and call them whiners. Well done!!!
If you care that much about your kids taking IB classes then make sure they take the prerequisites and apply. Virtually everyone gets off the waitlist and now with the additional 600 seats it’s even more likely. No one is forced to transfer back to their zoned HS if they don’t do full IB as long as they take a bare minimum of IB classes.
+1
Really not seeing the issue here, unless a kid only wants to take just 1-2 IB classes?
Is this policy new? Because back when my kid had to apply, the policy was you had stay in full IB or go back to your home school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
This is important to remember: transferring into IB (supposedly) requires you to take full IB. No picky-choosey like kids zoned for WL. This is a policy, IMO, APS needs to change.
NP whose Yorktown-zoned child wants to apply for IB next year. How would you change it? Either let the YT/Wakefield kids stay even if they don't do full IB, or make it so W-L kids can't dabble in IB, they either do it or not?
I would change it so they either do it or don't, same as everyone, since it's a program within a school. Letting everyone dabble in it, just defeats the purpose. But who will make this change?
Letting people "dabble" actually helps the program because they can offer a wider range of IB electives. If they limited access to only diploma students they would have electives with only a few students signing up and then they wouldn't offer them.
I believe that due to the extremely large number of high school students in this county, and the popularity of the IB program, they would easily fill, if they asked students to fully commit (perhaps at the latest by the start of grade 10) and decide to be "in or out".
I agree. If IB were established as its own option program, the typical high-pressure-expectations Arlington parents would be all over it like they are HBW. It would become an elite option school. But on second thought as I write this, the major obstacle to that happening would be the lack of extracurriculars. Parents expect their kids to be able to do and have it all. Separating IB from WL per se would disconnect their students from WL athletics. That's one of the problems Arlington Tech has now - students want to do activities AT doesn't offer (band) and it's too much of a hassle to go back to the home school for sports.
I don’t think APS is too keen on creating elite option schools. HBW became one due to its small size, but that wasn’t on purpose. Arlington Tech was purposefully not designed as an elite STEM school with admissions testing. A small elite IB option school would likely create division between the “dregs of humanity” at the neighborhood schools and the highly motivated academic stars at the elite IB option school. Also, would a small IB option school be able to offer the same number of IB electives?
Don't know and don't care. So what if the # of electives goes down? They still have their IB program and diploma. Option programs are choices and choices just might mean "choosing" to do without something else.
There's no point in creating this elite school if it doesn't attract a sizable number if kids away from the more crowded schools.
I think some PPs here overestimate the interest in the IB diploma. It is A LOT of work and the number of kids who actually complete the diploma isn't actually that large.
I'm not advocating for an IB program. I'm just saying that if it's going to be offered, it should be its own, actual IB program. If there isn't enough interest to sustain one, don't establish one; or try and if it doesn't draw enough, then eliminate it. Considering there are only approximately 60 IB diplomas issued in a given year, I think the program should be on "table 1" for budget cuts. Thousands of students across the country manage to get in and graduate from fine universities without an IB diploma and even without a single IB class. [b]The way IB is offered in APS is (1) inequitable and (2) not consistent with the actual IB program/curriculum.
There’s no requirement for schools to offer the IB Middle Years Programme to become an IB school. W-L has maintained one of the region’s most successful high school IB programs for 25 years. The schools new addition is allowing all eligible applicants an IB spot at W-L, and perhaps the W-L boundary should further shrink as needed to allow for continued access to all eligible students. Would it be equitable for IB to become an elite option program within W-L like Richard Montgomery HS in Rockville, closed to in-bounds W-L students? I don’t know.
But for now the W-L addition is meeting the needs of both IB and in-bounds neighborhood kids. In 5 years if enrollment continues upward in the south of the county unabated, then IB, HB, and other option programs might be up for debate. But as of now, no one is calling for changes.
This is the problem! It is serving "in-bounds neighborhood kids." IB should absolutely not become "an elite program" within WL that's open only to WL students. That's the whole point I've been trying to make. I don't care where they house the program. If they're going to offer it, it should be a full-time IB program consisting only of full-time IB students from across the county. It should NOT be open to the general WL populace (ie "serve in-bounds neighborhood kids") to take a few classes from in order to enhance their college applications - unless any high school student in any of the other high schools have that same access. My initial use of "elite" was not meant to describe the program, but to suggest how it would be viewed by Arlington parents always seeking the best for their genius children....like how people describe HBW as an "elite" program because it's small and highly coveted.
I don't think this is a problem. At least, unlike HB, if you really want your kid to go there (but you don't want them to do the full diploma or you don't get in through the lottery), you can move in bounds.
But I don't see many people actually complaining about this. I think this is a made up "issue."
I agree. It’s not really an issue apart from a few people on this forum claiming it’s not fair and that Yorktown should have better stats than W-L etc. Moreover maybe it’s good that some of the most disadvantaged kids in the metro area (who represent a large number of in-bounds W-L students) are exposed to highly motivated students on a daily basis at school, and that they can aspire to take on challenging coursework as they are able. That’s actually an argument for equity right there.
Wow, way to justify your extra benefits at W-L, blame the people who don't have it and call them whiners. Well done!!!
If you care that much about your kids taking IB classes then make sure they take the prerequisites and apply. Virtually everyone gets off the waitlist and now with the additional 600 seats it’s even more likely. No one is forced to transfer back to their zoned HS if they don’t do full IB as long as they take a bare minimum of IB classes.
+1
Really not seeing the issue here, unless a kid only wants to take just 1-2 IB classes?
Anonymous wrote:
If you care that much about your kids taking IB classes then make sure they take the prerequisites and apply. Virtually everyone gets off the waitlist and now with the additional 600 seats it’s even more likely. No one is forced to transfer back to their zoned HS if they don’t do full IB as long as they take a bare minimum of IB classes.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
This is important to remember: transferring into IB (supposedly) requires you to take full IB. No picky-choosey like kids zoned for WL. This is a policy, IMO, APS needs to change.
NP whose Yorktown-zoned child wants to apply for IB next year. How would you change it? Either let the YT/Wakefield kids stay even if they don't do full IB, or make it so W-L kids can't dabble in IB, they either do it or not?
I would change it so they either do it or don't, same as everyone, since it's a program within a school. Letting everyone dabble in it, just defeats the purpose. But who will make this change?
Letting people "dabble" actually helps the program because they can offer a wider range of IB electives. If they limited access to only diploma students they would have electives with only a few students signing up and then they wouldn't offer them.
I believe that due to the extremely large number of high school students in this county, and the popularity of the IB program, they would easily fill, if they asked students to fully commit (perhaps at the latest by the start of grade 10) and decide to be "in or out".
I agree. If IB were established as its own option program, the typical high-pressure-expectations Arlington parents would be all over it like they are HBW. It would become an elite option school. But on second thought as I write this, the major obstacle to that happening would be the lack of extracurriculars. Parents expect their kids to be able to do and have it all. Separating IB from WL per se would disconnect their students from WL athletics. That's one of the problems Arlington Tech has now - students want to do activities AT doesn't offer (band) and it's too much of a hassle to go back to the home school for sports.
I don’t think APS is too keen on creating elite option schools. HBW became one due to its small size, but that wasn’t on purpose. Arlington Tech was purposefully not designed as an elite STEM school with admissions testing. A small elite IB option school would likely create division between the “dregs of humanity” at the neighborhood schools and the highly motivated academic stars at the elite IB option school. Also, would a small IB option school be able to offer the same number of IB electives?
Don't know and don't care. So what if the # of electives goes down? They still have their IB program and diploma. Option programs are choices and choices just might mean "choosing" to do without something else.
There's no point in creating this elite school if it doesn't attract a sizable number if kids away from the more crowded schools.
I think some PPs here overestimate the interest in the IB diploma. It is A LOT of work and the number of kids who actually complete the diploma isn't actually that large.
I'm not advocating for an IB program. I'm just saying that if it's going to be offered, it should be its own, actual IB program. If there isn't enough interest to sustain one, don't establish one; or try and if it doesn't draw enough, then eliminate it. Considering there are only approximately 60 IB diplomas issued in a given year, I think the program should be on "table 1" for budget cuts. Thousands of students across the country manage to get in and graduate from fine universities without an IB diploma and even without a single IB class. [b]The way IB is offered in APS is (1) inequitable and (2) not consistent with the actual IB program/curriculum.
There’s no requirement for schools to offer the IB Middle Years Programme to become an IB school. W-L has maintained one of the region’s most successful high school IB programs for 25 years. The schools new addition is allowing all eligible applicants an IB spot at W-L, and perhaps the W-L boundary should further shrink as needed to allow for continued access to all eligible students. Would it be equitable for IB to become an elite option program within W-L like Richard Montgomery HS in Rockville, closed to in-bounds W-L students? I don’t know.
But for now the W-L addition is meeting the needs of both IB and in-bounds neighborhood kids. In 5 years if enrollment continues upward in the south of the county unabated, then IB, HB, and other option programs might be up for debate. But as of now, no one is calling for changes.
This is the problem! It is serving "in-bounds neighborhood kids." IB should absolutely not become "an elite program" within WL that's open only to WL students. That's the whole point I've been trying to make. I don't care where they house the program. If they're going to offer it, it should be a full-time IB program consisting only of full-time IB students from across the county. It should NOT be open to the general WL populace (ie "serve in-bounds neighborhood kids") to take a few classes from in order to enhance their college applications - unless any high school student in any of the other high schools have that same access. My initial use of "elite" was not meant to describe the program, but to suggest how it would be viewed by Arlington parents always seeking the best for their genius children....like how people describe HBW as an "elite" program because it's small and highly coveted.
I don't think this is a problem. At least, unlike HB, if you really want your kid to go there (but you don't want them to do the full diploma or you don't get in through the lottery), you can move in bounds.
But I don't see many people actually complaining about this. I think this is a made up "issue."
I agree. It’s not really an issue apart from a few people on this forum claiming it’s not fair and that Yorktown should have better stats than W-L etc. Moreover maybe it’s good that some of the most disadvantaged kids in the metro area (who represent a large number of in-bounds W-L students) are exposed to highly motivated students on a daily basis at school, and that they can aspire to take on challenging coursework as they are able. That’s actually an argument for equity right there.
Wow, way to justify your extra benefits at W-L, blame the people who don't have it and call them whiners. Well done!!!
If you care that much about your kids taking IB classes then make sure they take the prerequisites and apply. Virtually everyone gets off the waitlist and now with the additional 600 seats it’s even more likely. No one is forced to transfer back to their zoned HS if they don’t do full IB as long as they take a bare minimum of IB classes.
+1
Really not seeing the issue here, unless a kid only wants to take just 1-2 IB classes?
So why is it ok for a WL-zoned student to just take 1-2 IB classes, but everyone else has to have the intention of a full IB diploma? That's the ISSUE.
OMG, days and pages worth of griping and grudges over WL zoned students taking 1-2 IB classes? That is what you're so upset about???
AP sciences classes at Yorktown are two periods long, while they are only one period long at WL, so Yorktown students have twice as long to be taught the same material that WL kids have, all to take the same exact test. That looks like a huge advantage to me, a parent whose DS got a C in AP Physics at WL and a 2 on the test. But I don't see any WL parents complaining that it's not fair.
Time to move along and find something a bit more important to fight for.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
This is important to remember: transferring into IB (supposedly) requires you to take full IB. No picky-choosey like kids zoned for WL. This is a policy, IMO, APS needs to change.
NP whose Yorktown-zoned child wants to apply for IB next year. How would you change it? Either let the YT/Wakefield kids stay even if they don't do full IB, or make it so W-L kids can't dabble in IB, they either do it or not?
I would change it so they either do it or don't, same as everyone, since it's a program within a school. Letting everyone dabble in it, just defeats the purpose. But who will make this change?
Letting people "dabble" actually helps the program because they can offer a wider range of IB electives. If they limited access to only diploma students they would have electives with only a few students signing up and then they wouldn't offer them.
I believe that due to the extremely large number of high school students in this county, and the popularity of the IB program, they would easily fill, if they asked students to fully commit (perhaps at the latest by the start of grade 10) and decide to be "in or out".
I agree. If IB were established as its own option program, the typical high-pressure-expectations Arlington parents would be all over it like they are HBW. It would become an elite option school. But on second thought as I write this, the major obstacle to that happening would be the lack of extracurriculars. Parents expect their kids to be able to do and have it all. Separating IB from WL per se would disconnect their students from WL athletics. That's one of the problems Arlington Tech has now - students want to do activities AT doesn't offer (band) and it's too much of a hassle to go back to the home school for sports.
I don’t think APS is too keen on creating elite option schools. HBW became one due to its small size, but that wasn’t on purpose. Arlington Tech was purposefully not designed as an elite STEM school with admissions testing. A small elite IB option school would likely create division between the “dregs of humanity” at the neighborhood schools and the highly motivated academic stars at the elite IB option school. Also, would a small IB option school be able to offer the same number of IB electives?
Don't know and don't care. So what if the # of electives goes down? They still have their IB program and diploma. Option programs are choices and choices just might mean "choosing" to do without something else.
There's no point in creating this elite school if it doesn't attract a sizable number if kids away from the more crowded schools.
I think some PPs here overestimate the interest in the IB diploma. It is A LOT of work and the number of kids who actually complete the diploma isn't actually that large.
I'm not advocating for an IB program. I'm just saying that if it's going to be offered, it should be its own, actual IB program. If there isn't enough interest to sustain one, don't establish one; or try and if it doesn't draw enough, then eliminate it. Considering there are only approximately 60 IB diplomas issued in a given year, I think the program should be on "table 1" for budget cuts. Thousands of students across the country manage to get in and graduate from fine universities without an IB diploma and even without a single IB class. [b]The way IB is offered in APS is (1) inequitable and (2) not consistent with the actual IB program/curriculum.
There’s no requirement for schools to offer the IB Middle Years Programme to become an IB school. W-L has maintained one of the region’s most successful high school IB programs for 25 years. The schools new addition is allowing all eligible applicants an IB spot at W-L, and perhaps the W-L boundary should further shrink as needed to allow for continued access to all eligible students. Would it be equitable for IB to become an elite option program within W-L like Richard Montgomery HS in Rockville, closed to in-bounds W-L students? I don’t know.
But for now the W-L addition is meeting the needs of both IB and in-bounds neighborhood kids. In 5 years if enrollment continues upward in the south of the county unabated, then IB, HB, and other option programs might be up for debate. But as of now, no one is calling for changes.
This is the problem! It is serving "in-bounds neighborhood kids." IB should absolutely not become "an elite program" within WL that's open only to WL students. That's the whole point I've been trying to make. I don't care where they house the program. If they're going to offer it, it should be a full-time IB program consisting only of full-time IB students from across the county. It should NOT be open to the general WL populace (ie "serve in-bounds neighborhood kids") to take a few classes from in order to enhance their college applications - unless any high school student in any of the other high schools have that same access. My initial use of "elite" was not meant to describe the program, but to suggest how it would be viewed by Arlington parents always seeking the best for their genius children....like how people describe HBW as an "elite" program because it's small and highly coveted.
I don't think this is a problem. At least, unlike HB, if you really want your kid to go there (but you don't want them to do the full diploma or you don't get in through the lottery), you can move in bounds.
But I don't see many people actually complaining about this. I think this is a made up "issue."
I agree. It’s not really an issue apart from a few people on this forum claiming it’s not fair and that Yorktown should have better stats than W-L etc. Moreover maybe it’s good that some of the most disadvantaged kids in the metro area (who represent a large number of in-bounds W-L students) are exposed to highly motivated students on a daily basis at school, and that they can aspire to take on challenging coursework as they are able. That’s actually an argument for equity right there.
Wow, way to justify your extra benefits at W-L, blame the people who don't have it and call them whiners. Well done!!!
If you care that much about your kids taking IB classes then make sure they take the prerequisites and apply. Virtually everyone gets off the waitlist and now with the additional 600 seats it’s even more likely. No one is forced to transfer back to their zoned HS if they don’t do full IB as long as they take a bare minimum of IB classes.
+1
Really not seeing the issue here, unless a kid only wants to take just 1-2 IB classes?
So why is it ok for a WL-zoned student to just take 1-2 IB classes, but everyone else has to have the intention of a full IB diploma? That's the ISSUE.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
This is important to remember: transferring into IB (supposedly) requires you to take full IB. No picky-choosey like kids zoned for WL. This is a policy, IMO, APS needs to change.
NP whose Yorktown-zoned child wants to apply for IB next year. How would you change it? Either let the YT/Wakefield kids stay even if they don't do full IB, or make it so W-L kids can't dabble in IB, they either do it or not?
I would change it so they either do it or don't, same as everyone, since it's a program within a school. Letting everyone dabble in it, just defeats the purpose. But who will make this change?
Letting people "dabble" actually helps the program because they can offer a wider range of IB electives. If they limited access to only diploma students they would have electives with only a few students signing up and then they wouldn't offer them.
I believe that due to the extremely large number of high school students in this county, and the popularity of the IB program, they would easily fill, if they asked students to fully commit (perhaps at the latest by the start of grade 10) and decide to be "in or out".
I agree. If IB were established as its own option program, the typical high-pressure-expectations Arlington parents would be all over it like they are HBW. It would become an elite option school. But on second thought as I write this, the major obstacle to that happening would be the lack of extracurriculars. Parents expect their kids to be able to do and have it all. Separating IB from WL per se would disconnect their students from WL athletics. That's one of the problems Arlington Tech has now - students want to do activities AT doesn't offer (band) and it's too much of a hassle to go back to the home school for sports.
I don’t think APS is too keen on creating elite option schools. HBW became one due to its small size, but that wasn’t on purpose. Arlington Tech was purposefully not designed as an elite STEM school with admissions testing. A small elite IB option school would likely create division between the “dregs of humanity” at the neighborhood schools and the highly motivated academic stars at the elite IB option school. Also, would a small IB option school be able to offer the same number of IB electives?
Don't know and don't care. So what if the # of electives goes down? They still have their IB program and diploma. Option programs are choices and choices just might mean "choosing" to do without something else.
There's no point in creating this elite school if it doesn't attract a sizable number if kids away from the more crowded schools.
I think some PPs here overestimate the interest in the IB diploma. It is A LOT of work and the number of kids who actually complete the diploma isn't actually that large.
I'm not advocating for an IB program. I'm just saying that if it's going to be offered, it should be its own, actual IB program. If there isn't enough interest to sustain one, don't establish one; or try and if it doesn't draw enough, then eliminate it. Considering there are only approximately 60 IB diplomas issued in a given year, I think the program should be on "table 1" for budget cuts. Thousands of students across the country manage to get in and graduate from fine universities without an IB diploma and even without a single IB class. [b]The way IB is offered in APS is (1) inequitable and (2) not consistent with the actual IB program/curriculum.
There’s no requirement for schools to offer the IB Middle Years Programme to become an IB school. W-L has maintained one of the region’s most successful high school IB programs for 25 years. The schools new addition is allowing all eligible applicants an IB spot at W-L, and perhaps the W-L boundary should further shrink as needed to allow for continued access to all eligible students. Would it be equitable for IB to become an elite option program within W-L like Richard Montgomery HS in Rockville, closed to in-bounds W-L students? I don’t know.
But for now the W-L addition is meeting the needs of both IB and in-bounds neighborhood kids. In 5 years if enrollment continues upward in the south of the county unabated, then IB, HB, and other option programs might be up for debate. But as of now, no one is calling for changes.
This is the problem! It is serving "in-bounds neighborhood kids." IB should absolutely not become "an elite program" within WL that's open only to WL students. That's the whole point I've been trying to make. I don't care where they house the program. If they're going to offer it, it should be a full-time IB program consisting only of full-time IB students from across the county. It should NOT be open to the general WL populace (ie "serve in-bounds neighborhood kids") to take a few classes from in order to enhance their college applications - unless any high school student in any of the other high schools have that same access. My initial use of "elite" was not meant to describe the program, but to suggest how it would be viewed by Arlington parents always seeking the best for their genius children....like how people describe HBW as an "elite" program because it's small and highly coveted.
I don't think this is a problem. At least, unlike HB, if you really want your kid to go there (but you don't want them to do the full diploma or you don't get in through the lottery), you can move in bounds.
But I don't see many people actually complaining about this. I think this is a made up "issue."
I agree. It’s not really an issue apart from a few people on this forum claiming it’s not fair and that Yorktown should have better stats than W-L etc. Moreover maybe it’s good that some of the most disadvantaged kids in the metro area (who represent a large number of in-bounds W-L students) are exposed to highly motivated students on a daily basis at school, and that they can aspire to take on challenging coursework as they are able. That’s actually an argument for equity right there.
Wow, way to justify your extra benefits at W-L, blame the people who don't have it and call them whiners. Well done!!!
If you care that much about your kids taking IB classes then make sure they take the prerequisites and apply. Virtually everyone gets off the waitlist and now with the additional 600 seats it’s even more likely. No one is forced to transfer back to their zoned HS if they don’t do full IB as long as they take a bare minimum of IB classes.
+1
Really not seeing the issue here, unless a kid only wants to take just 1-2 IB classes?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
This is important to remember: transferring into IB (supposedly) requires you to take full IB. No picky-choosey like kids zoned for WL. This is a policy, IMO, APS needs to change.
NP whose Yorktown-zoned child wants to apply for IB next year. How would you change it? Either let the YT/Wakefield kids stay even if they don't do full IB, or make it so W-L kids can't dabble in IB, they either do it or not?
I would change it so they either do it or don't, same as everyone, since it's a program within a school. Letting everyone dabble in it, just defeats the purpose. But who will make this change?
Letting people "dabble" actually helps the program because they can offer a wider range of IB electives. If they limited access to only diploma students they would have electives with only a few students signing up and then they wouldn't offer them.
I believe that due to the extremely large number of high school students in this county, and the popularity of the IB program, they would easily fill, if they asked students to fully commit (perhaps at the latest by the start of grade 10) and decide to be "in or out".
I agree. If IB were established as its own option program, the typical high-pressure-expectations Arlington parents would be all over it like they are HBW. It would become an elite option school. But on second thought as I write this, the major obstacle to that happening would be the lack of extracurriculars. Parents expect their kids to be able to do and have it all. Separating IB from WL per se would disconnect their students from WL athletics. That's one of the problems Arlington Tech has now - students want to do activities AT doesn't offer (band) and it's too much of a hassle to go back to the home school for sports.
I don’t think APS is too keen on creating elite option schools. HBW became one due to its small size, but that wasn’t on purpose. Arlington Tech was purposefully not designed as an elite STEM school with admissions testing. A small elite IB option school would likely create division between the “dregs of humanity” at the neighborhood schools and the highly motivated academic stars at the elite IB option school. Also, would a small IB option school be able to offer the same number of IB electives?
Don't know and don't care. So what if the # of electives goes down? They still have their IB program and diploma. Option programs are choices and choices just might mean "choosing" to do without something else.
There's no point in creating this elite school if it doesn't attract a sizable number if kids away from the more crowded schools.
I think some PPs here overestimate the interest in the IB diploma. It is A LOT of work and the number of kids who actually complete the diploma isn't actually that large.
I'm not advocating for an IB program. I'm just saying that if it's going to be offered, it should be its own, actual IB program. If there isn't enough interest to sustain one, don't establish one; or try and if it doesn't draw enough, then eliminate it. Considering there are only approximately 60 IB diplomas issued in a given year, I think the program should be on "table 1" for budget cuts. Thousands of students across the country manage to get in and graduate from fine universities without an IB diploma and even without a single IB class. [b]The way IB is offered in APS is (1) inequitable and (2) not consistent with the actual IB program/curriculum.
There’s no requirement for schools to offer the IB Middle Years Programme to become an IB school. W-L has maintained one of the region’s most successful high school IB programs for 25 years. The schools new addition is allowing all eligible applicants an IB spot at W-L, and perhaps the W-L boundary should further shrink as needed to allow for continued access to all eligible students. Would it be equitable for IB to become an elite option program within W-L like Richard Montgomery HS in Rockville, closed to in-bounds W-L students? I don’t know.
But for now the W-L addition is meeting the needs of both IB and in-bounds neighborhood kids. In 5 years if enrollment continues upward in the south of the county unabated, then IB, HB, and other option programs might be up for debate. But as of now, no one is calling for changes.
This is the problem! It is serving "in-bounds neighborhood kids." IB should absolutely not become "an elite program" within WL that's open only to WL students. That's the whole point I've been trying to make. I don't care where they house the program. If they're going to offer it, it should be a full-time IB program consisting only of full-time IB students from across the county. It should NOT be open to the general WL populace (ie "serve in-bounds neighborhood kids") to take a few classes from in order to enhance their college applications - unless any high school student in any of the other high schools have that same access. My initial use of "elite" was not meant to describe the program, but to suggest how it would be viewed by Arlington parents always seeking the best for their genius children....like how people describe HBW as an "elite" program because it's small and highly coveted.
I don't think this is a problem. At least, unlike HB, if you really want your kid to go there (but you don't want them to do the full diploma or you don't get in through the lottery), you can move in bounds.
But I don't see many people actually complaining about this. I think this is a made up "issue."
I agree. It’s not really an issue apart from a few people on this forum claiming it’s not fair and that Yorktown should have better stats than W-L etc. Moreover maybe it’s good that some of the most disadvantaged kids in the metro area (who represent a large number of in-bounds W-L students) are exposed to highly motivated students on a daily basis at school, and that they can aspire to take on challenging coursework as they are able. That’s actually an argument for equity right there.
Wow, way to justify your extra benefits at W-L, blame the people who don't have it and call them whiners. Well done!!!
If you care that much about your kids taking IB classes then make sure they take the prerequisites and apply. Virtually everyone gets off the waitlist and now with the additional 600 seats it’s even more likely. No one is forced to transfer back to their zoned HS if they don’t do full IB as long as they take a bare minimum of IB classes.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
This is important to remember: transferring into IB (supposedly) requires you to take full IB. No picky-choosey like kids zoned for WL. This is a policy, IMO, APS needs to change.
NP whose Yorktown-zoned child wants to apply for IB next year. How would you change it? Either let the YT/Wakefield kids stay even if they don't do full IB, or make it so W-L kids can't dabble in IB, they either do it or not?
I would change it so they either do it or don't, same as everyone, since it's a program within a school. Letting everyone dabble in it, just defeats the purpose. But who will make this change?
Letting people "dabble" actually helps the program because they can offer a wider range of IB electives. If they limited access to only diploma students they would have electives with only a few students signing up and then they wouldn't offer them.
I believe that due to the extremely large number of high school students in this county, and the popularity of the IB program, they would easily fill, if they asked students to fully commit (perhaps at the latest by the start of grade 10) and decide to be "in or out".
I agree. If IB were established as its own option program, the typical high-pressure-expectations Arlington parents would be all over it like they are HBW. It would become an elite option school. But on second thought as I write this, the major obstacle to that happening would be the lack of extracurriculars. Parents expect their kids to be able to do and have it all. Separating IB from WL per se would disconnect their students from WL athletics. That's one of the problems Arlington Tech has now - students want to do activities AT doesn't offer (band) and it's too much of a hassle to go back to the home school for sports.
I don’t think APS is too keen on creating elite option schools. HBW became one due to its small size, but that wasn’t on purpose. Arlington Tech was purposefully not designed as an elite STEM school with admissions testing. A small elite IB option school would likely create division between the “dregs of humanity” at the neighborhood schools and the highly motivated academic stars at the elite IB option school. Also, would a small IB option school be able to offer the same number of IB electives?
Don't know and don't care. So what if the # of electives goes down? They still have their IB program and diploma. Option programs are choices and choices just might mean "choosing" to do without something else.
There's no point in creating this elite school if it doesn't attract a sizable number if kids away from the more crowded schools.
I think some PPs here overestimate the interest in the IB diploma. It is A LOT of work and the number of kids who actually complete the diploma isn't actually that large.
I'm not advocating for an IB program. I'm just saying that if it's going to be offered, it should be its own, actual IB program. If there isn't enough interest to sustain one, don't establish one; or try and if it doesn't draw enough, then eliminate it. Considering there are only approximately 60 IB diplomas issued in a given year, I think the program should be on "table 1" for budget cuts. Thousands of students across the country manage to get in and graduate from fine universities without an IB diploma and even without a single IB class. [b]The way IB is offered in APS is (1) inequitable and (2) not consistent with the actual IB program/curriculum.
There’s no requirement for schools to offer the IB Middle Years Programme to become an IB school. W-L has maintained one of the region’s most successful high school IB programs for 25 years. The schools new addition is allowing all eligible applicants an IB spot at W-L, and perhaps the W-L boundary should further shrink as needed to allow for continued access to all eligible students. Would it be equitable for IB to become an elite option program within W-L like Richard Montgomery HS in Rockville, closed to in-bounds W-L students? I don’t know.
But for now the W-L addition is meeting the needs of both IB and in-bounds neighborhood kids. In 5 years if enrollment continues upward in the south of the county unabated, then IB, HB, and other option programs might be up for debate. But as of now, no one is calling for changes.
This is the problem! It is serving "in-bounds neighborhood kids." IB should absolutely not become "an elite program" within WL that's open only to WL students. That's the whole point I've been trying to make. I don't care where they house the program. If they're going to offer it, it should be a full-time IB program consisting only of full-time IB students from across the county. It should NOT be open to the general WL populace (ie "serve in-bounds neighborhood kids") to take a few classes from in order to enhance their college applications - unless any high school student in any of the other high schools have that same access. My initial use of "elite" was not meant to describe the program, but to suggest how it would be viewed by Arlington parents always seeking the best for their genius children....like how people describe HBW as an "elite" program because it's small and highly coveted.
I don't think this is a problem. At least, unlike HB, if you really want your kid to go there (but you don't want them to do the full diploma or you don't get in through the lottery), you can move in bounds.
But I don't see many people actually complaining about this. I think this is a made up "issue."
I agree. It’s not really an issue apart from a few people on this forum claiming it’s not fair and that Yorktown should have better stats than W-L etc. Moreover maybe it’s good that some of the most disadvantaged kids in the metro area (who represent a large number of in-bounds W-L students) are exposed to highly motivated students on a daily basis at school, and that they can aspire to take on challenging coursework as they are able. That’s actually an argument for equity right there.
Wow, way to justify your extra benefits at W-L, blame the people who don't have it and call them whiners. Well done!!!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
This is important to remember: transferring into IB (supposedly) requires you to take full IB. No picky-choosey like kids zoned for WL. This is a policy, IMO, APS needs to change.
NP whose Yorktown-zoned child wants to apply for IB next year. How would you change it? Either let the YT/Wakefield kids stay even if they don't do full IB, or make it so W-L kids can't dabble in IB, they either do it or not?
I would change it so they either do it or don't, same as everyone, since it's a program within a school. Letting everyone dabble in it, just defeats the purpose. But who will make this change?
Letting people "dabble" actually helps the program because they can offer a wider range of IB electives. If they limited access to only diploma students they would have electives with only a few students signing up and then they wouldn't offer them.
I believe that due to the extremely large number of high school students in this county, and the popularity of the IB program, they would easily fill, if they asked students to fully commit (perhaps at the latest by the start of grade 10) and decide to be "in or out".
I agree. If IB were established as its own option program, the typical high-pressure-expectations Arlington parents would be all over it like they are HBW. It would become an elite option school. But on second thought as I write this, the major obstacle to that happening would be the lack of extracurriculars. Parents expect their kids to be able to do and have it all. Separating IB from WL per se would disconnect their students from WL athletics. That's one of the problems Arlington Tech has now - students want to do activities AT doesn't offer (band) and it's too much of a hassle to go back to the home school for sports.
I don’t think APS is too keen on creating elite option schools. HBW became one due to its small size, but that wasn’t on purpose. Arlington Tech was purposefully not designed as an elite STEM school with admissions testing. A small elite IB option school would likely create division between the “dregs of humanity” at the neighborhood schools and the highly motivated academic stars at the elite IB option school. Also, would a small IB option school be able to offer the same number of IB electives?
Don't know and don't care. So what if the # of electives goes down? They still have their IB program and diploma. Option programs are choices and choices just might mean "choosing" to do without something else.
There's no point in creating this elite school if it doesn't attract a sizable number if kids away from the more crowded schools.
I think some PPs here overestimate the interest in the IB diploma. It is A LOT of work and the number of kids who actually complete the diploma isn't actually that large.
I'm not advocating for an IB program. I'm just saying that if it's going to be offered, it should be its own, actual IB program. If there isn't enough interest to sustain one, don't establish one; or try and if it doesn't draw enough, then eliminate it. Considering there are only approximately 60 IB diplomas issued in a given year, I think the program should be on "table 1" for budget cuts. Thousands of students across the country manage to get in and graduate from fine universities without an IB diploma and even without a single IB class. [b]The way IB is offered in APS is (1) inequitable and (2) not consistent with the actual IB program/curriculum.
There’s no requirement for schools to offer the IB Middle Years Programme to become an IB school. W-L has maintained one of the region’s most successful high school IB programs for 25 years. The schools new addition is allowing all eligible applicants an IB spot at W-L, and perhaps the W-L boundary should further shrink as needed to allow for continued access to all eligible students. Would it be equitable for IB to become an elite option program within W-L like Richard Montgomery HS in Rockville, closed to in-bounds W-L students? I don’t know.
But for now the W-L addition is meeting the needs of both IB and in-bounds neighborhood kids. In 5 years if enrollment continues upward in the south of the county unabated, then IB, HB, and other option programs might be up for debate. But as of now, no one is calling for changes.
This is the problem! It is serving "in-bounds neighborhood kids." IB should absolutely not become "an elite program" within WL that's open only to WL students. That's the whole point I've been trying to make. I don't care where they house the program. If they're going to offer it, it should be a full-time IB program consisting only of full-time IB students from across the county. It should NOT be open to the general WL populace (ie "serve in-bounds neighborhood kids") to take a few classes from in order to enhance their college applications - unless any high school student in any of the other high schools have that same access. My initial use of "elite" was not meant to describe the program, but to suggest how it would be viewed by Arlington parents always seeking the best for their genius children....like how people describe HBW as an "elite" program because it's small and highly coveted.
I don't think this is a problem. At least, unlike HB, if you really want your kid to go there (but you don't want them to do the full diploma or you don't get in through the lottery), you can move in bounds.
But I don't see many people actually complaining about this. I think this is a made up "issue."
I agree. It’s not really an issue apart from a few people on this forum claiming it’s not fair and that Yorktown should have better stats than W-L etc. Moreover maybe it’s good that some of the most disadvantaged kids in the metro area (who represent a large number of in-bounds W-L students) are exposed to highly motivated students on a daily basis at school, and that they can aspire to take on challenging coursework as they are able. That’s actually an argument for equity right there.
Wow, way to justify your extra benefits at W-L, blame the people who don't have it and call them whiners. Well done!!!
Seriously how many actual students currently at YHS and WHS actually care about this? I think it's more a parental prestige perception issue.
I care about it. I have a student who would like to do IB, but does not want to have to transfer about from friends to do it, and who is worried about going to W-L and then having to leave if it turns out that the full IB program is too intense. Not to mention there may not even be enough spots to transfer in in the first place.
transfer away
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
This is important to remember: transferring into IB (supposedly) requires you to take full IB. No picky-choosey like kids zoned for WL. This is a policy, IMO, APS needs to change.
NP whose Yorktown-zoned child wants to apply for IB next year. How would you change it? Either let the YT/Wakefield kids stay even if they don't do full IB, or make it so W-L kids can't dabble in IB, they either do it or not?
I would change it so they either do it or don't, same as everyone, since it's a program within a school. Letting everyone dabble in it, just defeats the purpose. But who will make this change?
Letting people "dabble" actually helps the program because they can offer a wider range of IB electives. If they limited access to only diploma students they would have electives with only a few students signing up and then they wouldn't offer them.
I believe that due to the extremely large number of high school students in this county, and the popularity of the IB program, they would easily fill, if they asked students to fully commit (perhaps at the latest by the start of grade 10) and decide to be "in or out".
I agree. If IB were established as its own option program, the typical high-pressure-expectations Arlington parents would be all over it like they are HBW. It would become an elite option school. But on second thought as I write this, the major obstacle to that happening would be the lack of extracurriculars. Parents expect their kids to be able to do and have it all. Separating IB from WL per se would disconnect their students from WL athletics. That's one of the problems Arlington Tech has now - students want to do activities AT doesn't offer (band) and it's too much of a hassle to go back to the home school for sports.
I don’t think APS is too keen on creating elite option schools. HBW became one due to its small size, but that wasn’t on purpose. Arlington Tech was purposefully not designed as an elite STEM school with admissions testing. A small elite IB option school would likely create division between the “dregs of humanity” at the neighborhood schools and the highly motivated academic stars at the elite IB option school. Also, would a small IB option school be able to offer the same number of IB electives?
Don't know and don't care. So what if the # of electives goes down? They still have their IB program and diploma. Option programs are choices and choices just might mean "choosing" to do without something else.
There's no point in creating this elite school if it doesn't attract a sizable number if kids away from the more crowded schools.
I think some PPs here overestimate the interest in the IB diploma. It is A LOT of work and the number of kids who actually complete the diploma isn't actually that large.
I'm not advocating for an IB program. I'm just saying that if it's going to be offered, it should be its own, actual IB program. If there isn't enough interest to sustain one, don't establish one; or try and if it doesn't draw enough, then eliminate it. Considering there are only approximately 60 IB diplomas issued in a given year, I think the program should be on "table 1" for budget cuts. Thousands of students across the country manage to get in and graduate from fine universities without an IB diploma and even without a single IB class. [b]The way IB is offered in APS is (1) inequitable and (2) not consistent with the actual IB program/curriculum.
There’s no requirement for schools to offer the IB Middle Years Programme to become an IB school. W-L has maintained one of the region’s most successful high school IB programs for 25 years. The schools new addition is allowing all eligible applicants an IB spot at W-L, and perhaps the W-L boundary should further shrink as needed to allow for continued access to all eligible students. Would it be equitable for IB to become an elite option program within W-L like Richard Montgomery HS in Rockville, closed to in-bounds W-L students? I don’t know.
But for now the W-L addition is meeting the needs of both IB and in-bounds neighborhood kids. In 5 years if enrollment continues upward in the south of the county unabated, then IB, HB, and other option programs might be up for debate. But as of now, no one is calling for changes.
This is the problem! It is serving "in-bounds neighborhood kids." IB should absolutely not become "an elite program" within WL that's open only to WL students. That's the whole point I've been trying to make. I don't care where they house the program. If they're going to offer it, it should be a full-time IB program consisting only of full-time IB students from across the county. It should NOT be open to the general WL populace (ie "serve in-bounds neighborhood kids") to take a few classes from in order to enhance their college applications - unless any high school student in any of the other high schools have that same access. My initial use of "elite" was not meant to describe the program, but to suggest how it would be viewed by Arlington parents always seeking the best for their genius children....like how people describe HBW as an "elite" program because it's small and highly coveted.
I don't think this is a problem. At least, unlike HB, if you really want your kid to go there (but you don't want them to do the full diploma or you don't get in through the lottery), you can move in bounds.
But I don't see many people actually complaining about this. I think this is a made up "issue."
I agree. It’s not really an issue apart from a few people on this forum claiming it’s not fair and that Yorktown should have better stats than W-L etc. Moreover maybe it’s good that some of the most disadvantaged kids in the metro area (who represent a large number of in-bounds W-L students) are exposed to highly motivated students on a daily basis at school, and that they can aspire to take on challenging coursework as they are able. That’s actually an argument for equity right there.
Wow, way to justify your extra benefits at W-L, blame the people who don't have it and call them whiners. Well done!!!
Seriously how many actual students currently at YHS and WHS actually care about this? I think it's more a parental prestige perception issue.
I care about it. I have a student who would like to do IB, but does not want to have to transfer about from friends to do it, and who is worried about going to W-L and then having to leave if it turns out that the full IB program is too intense. Not to mention there may not even be enough spots to transfer in in the first place.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
This is important to remember: transferring into IB (supposedly) requires you to take full IB. No picky-choosey like kids zoned for WL. This is a policy, IMO, APS needs to change.
NP whose Yorktown-zoned child wants to apply for IB next year. How would you change it? Either let the YT/Wakefield kids stay even if they don't do full IB, or make it so W-L kids can't dabble in IB, they either do it or not?
I would change it so they either do it or don't, same as everyone, since it's a program within a school. Letting everyone dabble in it, just defeats the purpose. But who will make this change?
Letting people "dabble" actually helps the program because they can offer a wider range of IB electives. If they limited access to only diploma students they would have electives with only a few students signing up and then they wouldn't offer them.
I believe that due to the extremely large number of high school students in this county, and the popularity of the IB program, they would easily fill, if they asked students to fully commit (perhaps at the latest by the start of grade 10) and decide to be "in or out".
I agree. If IB were established as its own option program, the typical high-pressure-expectations Arlington parents would be all over it like they are HBW. It would become an elite option school. But on second thought as I write this, the major obstacle to that happening would be the lack of extracurriculars. Parents expect their kids to be able to do and have it all. Separating IB from WL per se would disconnect their students from WL athletics. That's one of the problems Arlington Tech has now - students want to do activities AT doesn't offer (band) and it's too much of a hassle to go back to the home school for sports.
I don’t think APS is too keen on creating elite option schools. HBW became one due to its small size, but that wasn’t on purpose. Arlington Tech was purposefully not designed as an elite STEM school with admissions testing. A small elite IB option school would likely create division between the “dregs of humanity” at the neighborhood schools and the highly motivated academic stars at the elite IB option school. Also, would a small IB option school be able to offer the same number of IB electives?
Don't know and don't care. So what if the # of electives goes down? They still have their IB program and diploma. Option programs are choices and choices just might mean "choosing" to do without something else.
There's no point in creating this elite school if it doesn't attract a sizable number if kids away from the more crowded schools.
I think some PPs here overestimate the interest in the IB diploma. It is A LOT of work and the number of kids who actually complete the diploma isn't actually that large.
I'm not advocating for an IB program. I'm just saying that if it's going to be offered, it should be its own, actual IB program. If there isn't enough interest to sustain one, don't establish one; or try and if it doesn't draw enough, then eliminate it. Considering there are only approximately 60 IB diplomas issued in a given year, I think the program should be on "table 1" for budget cuts. Thousands of students across the country manage to get in and graduate from fine universities without an IB diploma and even without a single IB class. [b]The way IB is offered in APS is (1) inequitable and (2) not consistent with the actual IB program/curriculum.
There’s no requirement for schools to offer the IB Middle Years Programme to become an IB school. W-L has maintained one of the region’s most successful high school IB programs for 25 years. The schools new addition is allowing all eligible applicants an IB spot at W-L, and perhaps the W-L boundary should further shrink as needed to allow for continued access to all eligible students. Would it be equitable for IB to become an elite option program within W-L like Richard Montgomery HS in Rockville, closed to in-bounds W-L students? I don’t know.
But for now the W-L addition is meeting the needs of both IB and in-bounds neighborhood kids. In 5 years if enrollment continues upward in the south of the county unabated, then IB, HB, and other option programs might be up for debate. But as of now, no one is calling for changes.
This is the problem! It is serving "in-bounds neighborhood kids." IB should absolutely not become "an elite program" within WL that's open only to WL students. That's the whole point I've been trying to make. I don't care where they house the program. If they're going to offer it, it should be a full-time IB program consisting only of full-time IB students from across the county. It should NOT be open to the general WL populace (ie "serve in-bounds neighborhood kids") to take a few classes from in order to enhance their college applications - unless any high school student in any of the other high schools have that same access. My initial use of "elite" was not meant to describe the program, but to suggest how it would be viewed by Arlington parents always seeking the best for their genius children....like how people describe HBW as an "elite" program because it's small and highly coveted.
I don't think this is a problem. At least, unlike HB, if you really want your kid to go there (but you don't want them to do the full diploma or you don't get in through the lottery), you can move in bounds.
But I don't see many people actually complaining about this. I think this is a made up "issue."
I agree. It’s not really an issue apart from a few people on this forum claiming it’s not fair and that Yorktown should have better stats than W-L etc. Moreover maybe it’s good that some of the most disadvantaged kids in the metro area (who represent a large number of in-bounds W-L students) are exposed to highly motivated students on a daily basis at school, and that they can aspire to take on challenging coursework as they are able. That’s actually an argument for equity right there.
Wow, way to justify your extra benefits at W-L, blame the people who don't have it and call them whiners. Well done!!!
Seriously how many actual students currently at YHS and WHS actually care about this? I think it's more a parental prestige perception issue.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
This is important to remember: transferring into IB (supposedly) requires you to take full IB. No picky-choosey like kids zoned for WL. This is a policy, IMO, APS needs to change.
NP whose Yorktown-zoned child wants to apply for IB next year. How would you change it? Either let the YT/Wakefield kids stay even if they don't do full IB, or make it so W-L kids can't dabble in IB, they either do it or not?
I would change it so they either do it or don't, same as everyone, since it's a program within a school. Letting everyone dabble in it, just defeats the purpose. But who will make this change?
Letting people "dabble" actually helps the program because they can offer a wider range of IB electives. If they limited access to only diploma students they would have electives with only a few students signing up and then they wouldn't offer them.
I believe that due to the extremely large number of high school students in this county, and the popularity of the IB program, they would easily fill, if they asked students to fully commit (perhaps at the latest by the start of grade 10) and decide to be "in or out".
I agree. If IB were established as its own option program, the typical high-pressure-expectations Arlington parents would be all over it like they are HBW. It would become an elite option school. But on second thought as I write this, the major obstacle to that happening would be the lack of extracurriculars. Parents expect their kids to be able to do and have it all. Separating IB from WL per se would disconnect their students from WL athletics. That's one of the problems Arlington Tech has now - students want to do activities AT doesn't offer (band) and it's too much of a hassle to go back to the home school for sports.
I don’t think APS is too keen on creating elite option schools. HBW became one due to its small size, but that wasn’t on purpose. Arlington Tech was purposefully not designed as an elite STEM school with admissions testing. A small elite IB option school would likely create division between the “dregs of humanity” at the neighborhood schools and the highly motivated academic stars at the elite IB option school. Also, would a small IB option school be able to offer the same number of IB electives?
Don't know and don't care. So what if the # of electives goes down? They still have their IB program and diploma. Option programs are choices and choices just might mean "choosing" to do without something else.
There's no point in creating this elite school if it doesn't attract a sizable number if kids away from the more crowded schools.
I think some PPs here overestimate the interest in the IB diploma. It is A LOT of work and the number of kids who actually complete the diploma isn't actually that large.
I'm not advocating for an IB program. I'm just saying that if it's going to be offered, it should be its own, actual IB program. If there isn't enough interest to sustain one, don't establish one; or try and if it doesn't draw enough, then eliminate it. Considering there are only approximately 60 IB diplomas issued in a given year, I think the program should be on "table 1" for budget cuts. Thousands of students across the country manage to get in and graduate from fine universities without an IB diploma and even without a single IB class. [b]The way IB is offered in APS is (1) inequitable and (2) not consistent with the actual IB program/curriculum.
There’s no requirement for schools to offer the IB Middle Years Programme to become an IB school. W-L has maintained one of the region’s most successful high school IB programs for 25 years. The schools new addition is allowing all eligible applicants an IB spot at W-L, and perhaps the W-L boundary should further shrink as needed to allow for continued access to all eligible students. Would it be equitable for IB to become an elite option program within W-L like Richard Montgomery HS in Rockville, closed to in-bounds W-L students? I don’t know.
But for now the W-L addition is meeting the needs of both IB and in-bounds neighborhood kids. In 5 years if enrollment continues upward in the south of the county unabated, then IB, HB, and other option programs might be up for debate. But as of now, no one is calling for changes.
This is the problem! It is serving "in-bounds neighborhood kids." IB should absolutely not become "an elite program" within WL that's open only to WL students. That's the whole point I've been trying to make. I don't care where they house the program. If they're going to offer it, it should be a full-time IB program consisting only of full-time IB students from across the county. It should NOT be open to the general WL populace (ie "serve in-bounds neighborhood kids") to take a few classes from in order to enhance their college applications - unless any high school student in any of the other high schools have that same access. My initial use of "elite" was not meant to describe the program, but to suggest how it would be viewed by Arlington parents always seeking the best for their genius children....like how people describe HBW as an "elite" program because it's small and highly coveted.
I don't think this is a problem. At least, unlike HB, if you really want your kid to go there (but you don't want them to do the full diploma or you don't get in through the lottery), you can move in bounds.
But I don't see many people actually complaining about this. I think this is a made up "issue."
I agree. It’s not really an issue apart from a few people on this forum claiming it’s not fair and that Yorktown should have better stats than W-L etc. Moreover maybe it’s good that some of the most disadvantaged kids in the metro area (who represent a large number of in-bounds W-L students) are exposed to highly motivated students on a daily basis at school, and that they can aspire to take on challenging coursework as they are able. That’s actually an argument for equity right there.
It seems like that would be the argument for making Wakefield the high school that has both AP and IB.
The W-L community has always had an outsized influence on APS and the residents are very good at justifying why the school receives preferential treatment relative to Yorktown and Wakefield. Then they turn around and say it’s a non-issue that no one really cares about.