Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No. If the enrollment is down in 1 school, teachers are shifted to other places. They don’t hire more people for the differences in teacher numbers at individual schools. Thus, if enrollment is down, the number of classes goes down and classes sizes go up.
But only up to a point. There are caps, and they are significantly lower in APS than FFX, at least in ES. I think everyone would like a K of 17 or fewer, but that’s not a realistic expectation in a public school, unless you are willing to send your precious to a Title 1 school. If students leave APS, but still reside in Arlington, it’s a PLUS for the system. The average student costs far more than their parents pay in taxes. Hope more leave!
Pretty clear that is SB strategy. See 4th high school discussion.
We are done and moving to FCPS. We get a nicer house in McLean, commute 1 day a week, and schools value rigor over “ not stressing kids”.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No. If the enrollment is down in 1 school, teachers are shifted to other places. They don’t hire more people for the differences in teacher numbers at individual schools. Thus, if enrollment is down, the number of classes goes down and classes sizes go up.
But only up to a point. There are caps, and they are significantly lower in APS than FFX, at least in ES. I think everyone would like a K of 17 or fewer, but that’s not a realistic expectation in a public school, unless you are willing to send your precious to a Title 1 school. If students leave APS, but still reside in Arlington, it’s a PLUS for the system. The average student costs far more than their parents pay in taxes. Hope more leave!
Anonymous wrote:No. If the enrollment is down in 1 school, teachers are shifted to other places. They don’t hire more people for the differences in teacher numbers at individual schools. Thus, if enrollment is down, the number of classes goes down and classes sizes go up.
No. If the enrollment is down in 1 school, teachers are shifted to other places. They don’t hire more people for the differences in teacher numbers at individual schools. Thus, if enrollment is down, the number of classes goes down and classes sizes go up.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In APS I know several families looking at private. The huge elementary classes have been terrible this year. Distractions, out of control kids, teachers frustrated/quitting
Ironically dropping enrollment will mean larger classes as money drains out of APS
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In APS I know several families looking at private. The huge elementary classes have been terrible this year. Distractions, out of control kids, teachers frustrated/quitting
Ironically dropping enrollment will mean larger classes as money drains out of APS
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No teachers in private school are fleeing. They are professionals who kept working in person during the pandemic and kept the academic standards very high. The kids in private get more attention, smaller class sizes, more opportunities in enrichment and in the arts and parents see better communication and leadership from school officials.
I always look at the job boards for private schools this time of year and there are considerably more postings than precovid
Anonymous wrote:No teachers in private school are fleeing. They are professionals who kept working in person during the pandemic and kept the academic standards very high. The kids in private get more attention, smaller class sizes, more opportunities in enrichment and in the arts and parents see better communication and leadership from school officials.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s all about academic vigor and desire for high quality instruction and opportunities for your children. Public schools have been totally exposed during Covid. We are keeping ours in private as we were previously an APS family
Agreed. We moved our kids to a new school and the difference in the quality of their education is unbelievable. Manual notes, homework, little to no use of technology, teachers staying after school for extra math help, the list goes on. Sadly (at least APS) is very much a sub-par education.
Anonymous wrote:No teachers in private school are fleeing. They are professionals who kept working in person during the pandemic and kept the academic standards very high. The kids in private get more attention, smaller class sizes, more opportunities in enrichment and in the arts and parents see better communication and leadership from school officials.
Anonymous wrote:Teachers and educators, in general, are fleeing the profession. This is in both public and private schools.
it's not worth it!
Anonymous wrote:It’s all about academic vigor and desire for high quality instruction and opportunities for your children. Public schools have been totally exposed during Covid. We are keeping ours in private as we were previously an APS family