Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:BALANCED SCHOOLS ARE BETTER SCHOOLS! Both WJ and Woodward will be great schools but they should absolutely be more balanced. There is no gross “token” aspect. Drop that. The goal should always be to balance the schools when it makes sense logistically. Which it does when 2 schools are a mile apart.
VMES is a wonderful elementary school and our kids will succeed in whichever high school we are assigned.
Absolutely reach out to BOE. Ideally before their Feb 24 meeting but consider using this email:
BOETestimony@mcpsmd.org
You can register to make your voice heard at the BOE March 9 and 10 meetings - register by Feb 26:
https://www.montgomeryschoolsmd.org/boe/community/participation/
Please just remember to speak for what is best for ALL KIDS not just your kids. We are all in this together.
I generally agree with the substance of this, but it rings kinda hollow knowing that the people saying this probably never said anything if favor of balancing in the past and likely never will again except when it personally benefits you. Are you going to be singing the same tune if they propose changing your ES boundaries to balance the number of FARMS kids with a nearby poorer schools? I doubt it.
DP here
How do you know who is saying this? I agree with the PP and I wanted KPES to be zoned for Einstein
Also when you resort to personal attacks like this it tells me you are trying to distract from a.valkd argument that you can't refute. We are talking about people's education here. Your sad little comeback is pathetic and self serving.
Anonymous wrote:If you’re proposing shuffling real families around, at least be forthcoming with your reasons:
1) I prefer fewer FARMs students in my zoned HS.
2) I don’t want my property values affected.
Those are valid reasons. And more believable than:
3) I want to balance FARMs in this specific instance (because I am negatively impacted).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:BALANCED SCHOOLS ARE BETTER SCHOOLS! Both WJ and Woodward will be great schools but they should absolutely be more balanced. There is no gross “token” aspect. Drop that. The goal should always be to balance the schools when it makes sense logistically. Which it does when 2 schools are a mile apart.
VMES is a wonderful elementary school and our kids will succeed in whichever high school we are assigned.
Absolutely reach out to BOE. Ideally before their Feb 24 meeting but consider using this email:
BOETestimony@mcpsmd.org
You can register to make your voice heard at the BOE March 9 and 10 meetings - register by Feb 26:
https://www.montgomeryschoolsmd.org/boe/community/participation/
Please just remember to speak for what is best for ALL KIDS not just your kids. We are all in this together.
I generally agree with the substance of this, but it rings kinda hollow knowing that the people saying this probably never said anything if favor of balancing in the past and likely never will again except when it personally benefits you. Are you going to be singing the same tune if they propose changing your ES boundaries to balance the number of FARMS kids with a nearby poorer schools? I doubt it.
Anonymous wrote:BALANCED SCHOOLS ARE BETTER SCHOOLS! Both WJ and Woodward will be great schools but they should absolutely be more balanced. There is no gross “token” aspect. Drop that. The goal should always be to balance the schools when it makes sense logistically. Which it does when 2 schools are a mile apart.
VMES is a wonderful elementary school and our kids will succeed in whichever high school we are assigned.
Absolutely reach out to BOE. Ideally before their Feb 24 meeting but consider using this email:
BOETestimony@mcpsmd.org
You can register to make your voice heard at the BOE March 9 and 10 meetings - register by Feb 26:
https://www.montgomeryschoolsmd.org/boe/community/participation/
Please just remember to speak for what is best for ALL KIDS not just your kids. We are all in this together.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Three years ago, Viers Mill had universal free lunch for one year. That is why they have greater than 95% for "now or in the past" FARMs. Literally every kid (including the PEP classes for 3yos, meaning some current K) who was there in the 2023-24 school year is counted in the percentage.
I've been a VM parent for 10 years. Nobody I've heard from here wants to go to WJ. For many reasons. VM families have been happy mostly with Wheaton/DCC, and most people seem reasonably okay with Woodward.
The VM community is super tight and protective. Maybe it feels like WJ is racist/classist/whatever, but mostly I think it's that those feeder schools operate in completely different worlds.
Then it's super important for area to change this by not segregating them. It will be helpful for WJ community to increase diversity. Otherwise we will get another Whitman where racism has become a norm.
I mean yes, from the superintendent's POV. But don't expect VMES families to enjoy being known as the literal diversity hires, and integrate another school at the expense of their own community.
No need to put down VMES families by saying they are diversity hires. It's offensive.
VMES kids will benefit from attending lower FARMS schools as well. In fact all kids will benefit from that so it make sense to not put all FARMS kids in one school and put all rich kids in another. Both schools are side by side. Two well balanced schools will benefit everyone attending both schools. It;s best for our region.
Offensive to whom? My family, which attends VMES? I'm sure there are families that would be cool with WJ and I'm not denying their opinion, but far and wide most of the other parents here I've talked to are very aware of the perception that our kids would be the token brown/FARMs students (even the white and not FARMs jaguars) and are not comfortable with it. VMES kids would benefit from a lower FARMs school because too many FARMs is bad? A school is inherently better because its FARMs is lower? That kind of doesn't resonate when you're talking about a high FARMs ES with families who love their school community. "There's fewer people like you at this other school. You understand why that makes it better, don't you?"
Not the PP, but nothing offensive in it unless you look for offence. Concentrating poverty in one high school is not a good idea.
+1 it is a tricky subject which is probably why MCPS is getting away with perpetuating racial segregation. The reality is that kids that receive FARMS have a lot of different needs. Children from all backgrounds can struggle or excel academically and behaviorally, and poverty has a real impact on whether or not a child struggles. Concentrating poverty in one school doesn't help those kids. Balancing FARMS can make a real difference in outcomes for those kids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Three years ago, Viers Mill had universal free lunch for one year. That is why they have greater than 95% for "now or in the past" FARMs. Literally every kid (including the PEP classes for 3yos, meaning some current K) who was there in the 2023-24 school year is counted in the percentage.
I've been a VM parent for 10 years. Nobody I've heard from here wants to go to WJ. For many reasons. VM families have been happy mostly with Wheaton/DCC, and most people seem reasonably okay with Woodward.
The VM community is super tight and protective. Maybe it feels like WJ is racist/classist/whatever, but mostly I think it's that those feeder schools operate in completely different worlds.
Then it's super important for area to change this by not segregating them. It will be helpful for WJ community to increase diversity. Otherwise we will get another Whitman where racism has become a norm.
I mean yes, from the superintendent's POV. But don't expect VMES families to enjoy being known as the literal diversity hires, and integrate another school at the expense of their own community.
No need to put down VMES families by saying they are diversity hires. It's offensive.
VMES kids will benefit from attending lower FARMS schools as well. In fact all kids will benefit from that so it make sense to not put all FARMS kids in one school and put all rich kids in another. Both schools are side by side. Two well balanced schools will benefit everyone attending both schools. It;s best for our region.
Offensive to whom? My family, which attends VMES? I'm sure there are families that would be cool with WJ and I'm not denying their opinion, but far and wide most of the other parents here I've talked to are very aware of the perception that our kids would be the token brown/FARMs students (even the white and not FARMs jaguars) and are not comfortable with it. VMES kids would benefit from a lower FARMs school because too many FARMs is bad? A school is inherently better because its FARMs is lower? That kind of doesn't resonate when you're talking about a high FARMs ES with families who love their school community. "There's fewer people like you at this other school. You understand why that makes it better, don't you?"
Not the PP, but nothing offensive in it unless you look for offence. Concentrating poverty in one high school is not a good idea.
+1 it is a tricky subject which is probably why MCPS is getting away with perpetuating racial segregation. The reality is that kids that receive FARMS have a lot of different needs. Children from all backgrounds can struggle or excel academically and behaviorally, and poverty has a real impact on whether or not a child struggles. Concentrating poverty in one school doesn't help those kids. Balancing FARMS can make a real difference in outcomes for those kids.
35% farms is not high. Viers Mill is 63% now.
Anonymous wrote:What is best for one family is not necessarily the best for another family. Viers Mill is totally unbalanced right now and is an amazing school so you have no point.
Why are you trying to tell me Walter Johnson is best for my family? There is no way you are a Viers Mill parent.
Families decide for yourself what is best for your family.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Three years ago, Viers Mill had universal free lunch for one year. That is why they have greater than 95% for "now or in the past" FARMs. Literally every kid (including the PEP classes for 3yos, meaning some current K) who was there in the 2023-24 school year is counted in the percentage.
I've been a VM parent for 10 years. Nobody I've heard from here wants to go to WJ. For many reasons. VM families have been happy mostly with Wheaton/DCC, and most people seem reasonably okay with Woodward.
The VM community is super tight and protective. Maybe it feels like WJ is racist/classist/whatever, but mostly I think it's that those feeder schools operate in completely different worlds.
Then it's super important for area to change this by not segregating them. It will be helpful for WJ community to increase diversity. Otherwise we will get another Whitman where racism has become a norm.
I mean yes, from the superintendent's POV. But don't expect VMES families to enjoy being known as the literal diversity hires, and integrate another school at the expense of their own community.
No need to put down VMES families by saying they are diversity hires. It's offensive.
VMES kids will benefit from attending lower FARMS schools as well. In fact all kids will benefit from that so it make sense to not put all FARMS kids in one school and put all rich kids in another. Both schools are side by side. Two well balanced schools will benefit everyone attending both schools. It;s best for our region.
Offensive to whom? My family, which attends VMES? I'm sure there are families that would be cool with WJ and I'm not denying their opinion, but far and wide most of the other parents here I've talked to are very aware of the perception that our kids would be the token brown/FARMs students (even the white and not FARMs jaguars) and are not comfortable with it. VMES kids would benefit from a lower FARMs school because too many FARMs is bad? A school is inherently better because its FARMs is lower? That kind of doesn't resonate when you're talking about a high FARMs ES with families who love their school community. "There's fewer people like you at this other school. You understand why that makes it better, don't you?"
Not the PP, but nothing offensive in it unless you look for offence. Concentrating poverty in one high school is not a good idea.
+1 it is a tricky subject which is probably why MCPS is getting away with perpetuating racial segregation. The reality is that kids that receive FARMS have a lot of different needs. Children from all backgrounds can struggle or excel academically and behaviorally, and poverty has a real impact on whether or not a child struggles. Concentrating poverty in one school doesn't help those kids. Balancing FARMS can make a real difference in outcomes for those kids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Three years ago, Viers Mill had universal free lunch for one year. That is why they have greater than 95% for "now or in the past" FARMs. Literally every kid (including the PEP classes for 3yos, meaning some current K) who was there in the 2023-24 school year is counted in the percentage.
I've been a VM parent for 10 years. Nobody I've heard from here wants to go to WJ. For many reasons. VM families have been happy mostly with Wheaton/DCC, and most people seem reasonably okay with Woodward.
The VM community is super tight and protective. Maybe it feels like WJ is racist/classist/whatever, but mostly I think it's that those feeder schools operate in completely different worlds.
Then it's super important for area to change this by not segregating them. It will be helpful for WJ community to increase diversity. Otherwise we will get another Whitman where racism has become a norm.
I mean yes, from the superintendent's POV. But don't expect VMES families to enjoy being known as the literal diversity hires, and integrate another school at the expense of their own community.
No need to put down VMES families by saying they are diversity hires. It's offensive.
VMES kids will benefit from attending lower FARMS schools as well. In fact all kids will benefit from that so it make sense to not put all FARMS kids in one school and put all rich kids in another. Both schools are side by side. Two well balanced schools will benefit everyone attending both schools. It;s best for our region.
Offensive to whom? My family, which attends VMES? I'm sure there are families that would be cool with WJ and I'm not denying their opinion, but far and wide most of the other parents here I've talked to are very aware of the perception that our kids would be the token brown/FARMs students (even the white and not FARMs jaguars) and are not comfortable with it. VMES kids would benefit from a lower FARMs school because too many FARMs is bad? A school is inherently better because its FARMs is lower? That kind of doesn't resonate when you're talking about a high FARMs ES with families who love their school community. "There's fewer people like you at this other school. You understand why that makes it better, don't you?"
Not the PP, but nothing offensive in it unless you look for offence. Concentrating poverty in one high school is not a good idea.
Anonymous wrote:Viers Mill Parents - I firmly suggest you write a letter to the BOE stating your preferred school choice and reasoning. Stating it on this thread is meaningless. There are various groups trying to reengineer us to Walter Johnson and back to Wheaton. We need to make our voices heard to the BOE as they are the ones that have the final say. Take 5 minutes and write an email.
boe@mcpsmd.org