Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My dad was in the first graduating class from HB in the 70s! And my brother went there too. (I went to YHS).
HB is a magical place that helps students thrive - if it is the right fit. It quite literally saved my brothers life after a traumatic middle school experience at Williamsburg. He is still extremely tight with his group of friends from HB and he is in touch with several teachers and administrators too. Its a tight-night community.
I do think it has changed since the early 2000's when we were in school but I give HB a lot of credit. It is awesome.
Takeaway: your brother would be dead today sadly bc the odds of getting into HB are so small since everyone is trying to avoid the awful middle school experience and overcrowded high schools.
Why can’t we build a 2nd HB? It’s clear they will have political will to build a 4th comprehensive high school (yay pandemic for saving their bacon on enrollment and basically skimming all the demanding parents to private schools).
While multiple small HB’s would undoubtedly fill up due to demand, they would likely draw the most motivated families away from the traditional large middle and high schools. I could be wrong, but that might be one of the unstated reasons. That may also be why Arlington Tech is not exactly a TJHSST replacement, or why there has been ambivalence towards the creation of specialized high schools like a performing and fine arts middle/high school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My dad was in the first graduating class from HB in the 70s! And my brother went there too. (I went to YHS).
HB is a magical place that helps students thrive - if it is the right fit. It quite literally saved my brothers life after a traumatic middle school experience at Williamsburg. He is still extremely tight with his group of friends from HB and he is in touch with several teachers and administrators too. Its a tight-night community.
I do think it has changed since the early 2000's when we were in school but I give HB a lot of credit. It is awesome.
Takeaway: your brother would be dead today sadly bc the odds of getting into HB are so small since everyone is trying to avoid the awful middle school experience and overcrowded high schools.
Why can’t we build a 2nd HB? It’s clear they will have political will to build a 4th comprehensive high school (yay pandemic for saving their bacon on enrollment and basically skimming all the demanding parents to private schools).
While multiple small HB’s would undoubtedly fill up due to demand, they would likely draw the most motivated families away from the traditional large middle and high schools. I could be wrong, but that might be one of the unstated reasons. That may also be why Arlington Tech is not exactly a TJHSST replacement, or why there has been ambivalence towards the creation of specialized high schools like a performing and fine arts middle/high school.
Imagine if APS was concerned about something – ANYTHING – other than preserving its own mediocrity.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My dad was in the first graduating class from HB in the 70s! And my brother went there too. (I went to YHS).
HB is a magical place that helps students thrive - if it is the right fit. It quite literally saved my brothers life after a traumatic middle school experience at Williamsburg. He is still extremely tight with his group of friends from HB and he is in touch with several teachers and administrators too. Its a tight-night community.
I do think it has changed since the early 2000's when we were in school but I give HB a lot of credit. It is awesome.
Takeaway: your brother would be dead today sadly bc the odds of getting into HB are so small since everyone is trying to avoid the awful middle school experience and overcrowded high schools.
Why can’t we build a 2nd HB? It’s clear they will have political will to build a 4th comprehensive high school (yay pandemic for saving their bacon on enrollment and basically skimming all the demanding parents to private schools).
While multiple small HB’s would undoubtedly fill up due to demand, they would likely draw the most motivated families away from the traditional large middle and high schools. I could be wrong, but that might be one of the unstated reasons. That may also be why Arlington Tech is not exactly a TJHSST replacement, or why there has been ambivalence towards the creation of specialized high schools like a performing and fine arts middle/high school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My dad was in the first graduating class from HB in the 70s! And my brother went there too. (I went to YHS).
HB is a magical place that helps students thrive - if it is the right fit. It quite literally saved my brothers life after a traumatic middle school experience at Williamsburg. He is still extremely tight with his group of friends from HB and he is in touch with several teachers and administrators too. Its a tight-night community.
I do think it has changed since the early 2000's when we were in school but I give HB a lot of credit. It is awesome.
Takeaway: your brother would be dead today sadly bc the odds of getting into HB are so small since everyone is trying to avoid the awful middle school experience and overcrowded high schools.
Why can’t we build a 2nd HB? It’s clear they will have political will to build a 4th comprehensive high school (yay pandemic for saving their bacon on enrollment and basically skimming all the demanding parents to private schools).
Anonymous wrote:My dad was in the first graduating class from HB in the 70s! And my brother went there too. (I went to YHS).
HB is a magical place that helps students thrive - if it is the right fit. It quite literally saved my brothers life after a traumatic middle school experience at Williamsburg. He is still extremely tight with his group of friends from HB and he is in touch with several teachers and administrators too. Its a tight-night community.
I do think it has changed since the early 2000's when we were in school but I give HB a lot of credit. It is awesome.
Anonymous wrote:I'd love to know how OP is just now making a HB decision when the lottery concluded (and decisions were due) many weeks ago...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:HB used to be designed as a more free spirited community for kids that are more independent learners. It is now where every parent wants to send their kid so they don’t have to go to the more crowded schools. No hippy/dippy left. All privileged kids.
They're all privileged kids by virtue of winning the lottery? Is that what you mean?
Anonymous wrote:Oh Lord, this is going to be fun...
Anonymous wrote:HB used to be designed as a more free spirited community for kids that are more independent learners. It is now where every parent wants to send their kid so they don’t have to go to the more crowded schools. No hippy/dippy left. All privileged kids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Private school paid by a public school system.
As a parent whose had one kid at HB starting in 9th and another who attended W-L (both of whom have been in APS since Kindergarten) I think this is a ridiculous take. H-B is very much a public school.
We will talk when HB is 400 high school students and WL is 2700 students
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Private school paid by a public school system.
As a parent whose had one kid at HB starting in 9th and another who attended W-L (both of whom have been in APS since Kindergarten) I think this is a ridiculous take. H-B is very much a public school.
Anonymous wrote:Private school paid by a public school system.
Anonymous wrote:I'd love to know how OP is just now making a HB decision when the lottery concluded (and decisions were due) many weeks ago...