Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I live in Arlington with small kids. What office/board should I run for to advocate for building new schools where current "community centers" reside, and to stop affordable housing?
Seriously. Those communit centers are such a waste for all involved. Does anyone have any actual numbers of the traffic there? I bet you it would be cheaper to buy elderly patrons gold gym memberships than run those old buildings for the andul of people who attend.
Anonymous wrote:I live in Arlington with small kids. What office/board should I run for to advocate for building new schools where current "community centers" reside, and to stop affordable housing?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Get real. WTF do you think "early college" is?
Then write the board and let them know it's a bad idea. I will too. Early College has not been voted on and it's not on tonight's agenda.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
The ES parents and preschool parents should be the ONLY ones with any say since it will be our kids who have to live with the decisions.
But the parents of older kids are the ones who have lived with high school aged kids and know what does and doesn't cause problems.
Remember how during the Stratford/Wilson debate, all those parents of second graders were worried about where kids would have recess at Wilson?
Middle school. Recess.
(That's not to say that there weren't other reasons to decide against Wilson MS)
I may not have teenagers, but I do know that distance learning and shifts are a crap idea and are a cop out we will have to utilize because APS kicked the can for too long. Also, I was a teenager who went to a mega school. It was a magnet school, and even as someone who was part of the smaller program within a very large school, it was not a positive experience for me. Many were fine, but I was not. Remains to be seen whether my children are like me in this regard, but we moved to Arlington because I hoped to avoid finding out the hard way. We'll put in for HB and if that doesn't work I guess we'll explore private options.
No one is proposing high school in shifts or distance learning as a solution. They were talked about earlier but never should have been brought up in the first place.
Get real. WTF do you think "early college" is?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
The ES parents and preschool parents should be the ONLY ones with any say since it will be our kids who have to live with the decisions.
But the parents of older kids are the ones who have lived with high school aged kids and know what does and doesn't cause problems.
Remember how during the Stratford/Wilson debate, all those parents of second graders were worried about where kids would have recess at Wilson?
Middle school. Recess.
(That's not to say that there weren't other reasons to decide against Wilson MS)
I may not have teenagers, but I do know that distance learning and shifts are a crap idea and are a cop out we will have to utilize because APS kicked the can for too long. Also, I was a teenager who went to a mega school. It was a magnet school, and even as someone who was part of the smaller program within a very large school, it was not a positive experience for me. Many were fine, but I was not. Remains to be seen whether my children are like me in this regard, but we moved to Arlington because I hoped to avoid finding out the hard way. We'll put in for HB and if that doesn't work I guess we'll explore private options.
No one is proposing high school in shifts or distance learning as a solution. They were talked about earlier but never should have been brought up in the first place.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
The ES parents and preschool parents should be the ONLY ones with any say since it will be our kids who have to live with the decisions.
But the parents of older kids are the ones who have lived with high school aged kids and know what does and doesn't cause problems.
Remember how during the Stratford/Wilson debate, all those parents of second graders were worried about where kids would have recess at Wilson?
Middle school. Recess.
(That's not to say that there weren't other reasons to decide against Wilson MS)
I may not have teenagers, but I do know that distance learning and shifts are a crap idea and are a cop out we will have to utilize because APS kicked the can for too long. Also, I was a teenager who went to a mega school. It was a magnet school, and even as someone who was part of the smaller program within a very large school, it was not a positive experience for me. Many were fine, but I was not. Remains to be seen whether my children are like me in this regard, but we moved to Arlington because I hoped to avoid finding out the hard way. We'll put in for HB and if that doesn't work I guess we'll explore private options.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
The ES parents and preschool parents should be the ONLY ones with any say since it will be our kids who have to live with the decisions.
But the parents of older kids are the ones who have lived with high school aged kids and know what does and doesn't cause problems.
Remember how during the Stratford/Wilson debate, all those parents of second graders were worried about where kids would have recess at Wilson?
Middle school. Recess.
(That's not to say that there weren't other reasons to decide against Wilson MS)
Anonymous wrote:
The ES parents and preschool parents should be the ONLY ones with any say since it will be our kids who have to live with the decisions.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In a best case scenario, Ed center could be gutted and remodeled to house a full pre-K to 8th grade Montessori program. It would increase traffic but may resolve some of the complaints of the WL parents over a mega high school. The entire career center site could be used for a 4th comprehensive high school. There is no perfect solution.
You must mean elementary school parents. Many W-L parents support growing the school within reason, and with the necessary facilities to support a larger population.
The ES parents and preschool parents should be the ONLY ones with any say since it will be our kids who have to live with the decisions.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The ES parents and preschool parents should be the ONLY ones with any say since it will be our kids who have to live with the decisions.
My taxes are paying for your kids' school. Why are you the only one that gets a say?
Anonymous wrote:The ES parents and preschool parents should be the ONLY ones with any say since it will be our kids who have to live with the decisions.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In a best case scenario, Ed center could be gutted and remodeled to house a full pre-K to 8th grade Montessori program. It would increase traffic but may resolve some of the complaints of the WL parents over a mega high school. The entire career center site could be used for a 4th comprehensive high school. There is no perfect solution.
You must mean elementary school parents. Many W-L parents support growing the school within reason, and with the necessary facilities to support a larger population.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In a best case scenario, Ed center could be gutted and remodeled to house a full pre-K to 8th grade Montessori program. It would increase traffic but may resolve some of the complaints of the WL parents over a mega high school. The entire career center site could be used for a 4th comprehensive high school. There is no perfect solution.
You must mean elementary school parents. Many W-L parents support growing the school within reason, and with the necessary facilities to support a larger population.
Ofd course current parents support growing the school. It won't be over sized until they are long gone .