Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:1) why not Hamm?
2) look closely at WL and how they are adding 600 student seats to an already overcrowded campus via office conversions
W-L’s not overcrowded now and the trailers will disappear. W-L will be close to the size of the larger Fairfax County high schools as the new addition fills up. Wakefield is currently the most overcrowded school. Yorktown was accepting transfers from the W-L zone without preconditions, and that may have been extended to the Wakefield zone. But I’m not sure.
W-L will have the POPULATION of a large Fairfax school (2600) in a building built for 2000 students plus the office addition (some small lunch room, etc) on a campus that is a fraction of the size of a Fairfax school.
Yorktown doesn’t take WL transfers, and least not in last 2 years when our neighbor tried.
Arlington citizens have been pushing for the dense urban concept schools for years. The new HB/Heights school in Rosslyn, the W-L addition, Career Center redevelopment, etc.. At least the W-L addition has a planetarium and doesn’t feel like an office building—like the ones in Ballston. I think it blends into the campus nicely and it overlooks the athletic fields. The building itself is very distinctive.
That is utter BS. There are zero citizens pushing for dense urban concept schools except county boards who want to save land for their developer buddy/campaign donors. There have active requests for a 4th comprehensive high school for at least 6 or 7 years, with ideas at Kenmore or the VHC site on Carlin Springs Rd, or even Career Center (albeit with a smaller neighborhood high school which is NOT wanted).
The WL addition was simply a stop gap because the students have to go somewhere, and WL had the adjacent office building they could repurpose.
The New HB/Heights urban school was made in to HB precisely because most neighborhood parents/citizens did NOT want their neighborhood middle school in Rosslyn and preferred the suburban style Hamm campus. HB was given the urban location precisely because it was an option school so parents/students would have the right to opt out.
APS planned and proposed to tear down the administrative offices and planetarium and build a more expensive new school addition but the community was outraged the historic structure would be demolished. So APS was forced by the community preservationists to preserve the building facade and planetarium, and to design and construct the educational spaces inside without altering the historic building exterior.
For a new low rise suburban style high school with surface parking lot, swimming pool, and stadium, the Kennore site is the only one that could work, but the community there was outraged at the idea and blocked it as I recall.
Well yeah, basically you have young parents begging for more high school seats for this kids while paying crazy amounts for housing, and the boomers are complaining about traffic and 70s "historical preservation". I think everyone was fond of the planetarium, but honestly if they had rebuilt that office building they likely would have just made WL even bigger given the opportunity.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:1) why not Hamm?
2) look closely at WL and how they are adding 600 student seats to an already overcrowded campus via office conversions
W-L’s not overcrowded now and the trailers will disappear. W-L will be close to the size of the larger Fairfax County high schools as the new addition fills up. Wakefield is currently the most overcrowded school. Yorktown was accepting transfers from the W-L zone without preconditions, and that may have been extended to the Wakefield zone. But I’m not sure.
W-L will have the POPULATION of a large Fairfax school (2600) in a building built for 2000 students plus the office addition (some small lunch room, etc) on a campus that is a fraction of the size of a Fairfax school.
Yorktown doesn’t take WL transfers, and least not in last 2 years when our neighbor tried.
Arlington citizens have been pushing for the dense urban concept schools for years. The new HB/Heights school in Rosslyn, the W-L addition, Career Center redevelopment, etc.. At least the W-L addition has a planetarium and doesn’t feel like an office building—like the ones in Ballston. I think it blends into the campus nicely and it overlooks the athletic fields. The building itself is very distinctive.
That is utter BS. There are zero citizens pushing for dense urban concept schools except county boards who want to save land for their developer buddy/campaign donors. There have active requests for a 4th comprehensive high school for at least 6 or 7 years, with ideas at Kenmore or the VHC site on Carlin Springs Rd, or even Career Center (albeit with a smaller neighborhood high school which is NOT wanted).
The WL addition was simply a stop gap because the students have to go somewhere, and WL had the adjacent office building they could repurpose.
The New HB/Heights urban school was made in to HB precisely because most neighborhood parents/citizens did NOT want their neighborhood middle school in Rosslyn and preferred the suburban style Hamm campus. HB was given the urban location precisely because it was an option school so parents/students would have the right to opt out.
APS planned and proposed to tear down the administrative offices and planetarium and build a more expensive new school addition but the community was outraged the historic structure would be demolished. So APS was forced by the community preservationists to preserve the building facade and planetarium, and to design and construct the educational spaces inside without altering the historic building exterior.
For a new low rise suburban style high school with surface parking lot, swimming pool, and stadium, the Kennore site is the only one that could work, but the community there was outraged at the idea and blocked it as I recall.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:1) why not Hamm?
2) look closely at WL and how they are adding 600 student seats to an already overcrowded campus via office conversions
W-L’s not overcrowded now and the trailers will disappear. W-L will be close to the size of the larger Fairfax County high schools as the new addition fills up. Wakefield is currently the most overcrowded school. Yorktown was accepting transfers from the W-L zone without preconditions, and that may have been extended to the Wakefield zone. But I’m not sure.
W-L will have the POPULATION of a large Fairfax school (2600) in a building built for 2000 students plus the office addition (some small lunch room, etc) on a campus that is a fraction of the size of a Fairfax school.
Yorktown doesn’t take WL transfers, and least not in last 2 years when our neighbor tried.
Arlington citizens have been pushing for the dense urban concept schools for years. The new HB/Heights school in Rosslyn, the W-L addition, Career Center redevelopment, etc.. At least the W-L addition has a planetarium and doesn’t feel like an office building—like the ones in Ballston. I think it blends into the campus nicely and it overlooks the athletic fields. The building itself is very distinctive.
That is utter BS. There are zero citizens pushing for dense urban concept schools except county boards who want to save land for their developer buddy/campaign donors. There have active requests for a 4th comprehensive high school for at least 6 or 7 years, with ideas at Kenmore or the VHC site on Carlin Springs Rd, or even Career Center (albeit with a smaller neighborhood high school which is NOT wanted).
The WL addition was simply a stop gap because the students have to go somewhere, and WL had the adjacent office building they could repurpose.
The New HB/Heights urban school was made in to HB precisely because most neighborhood parents/citizens did NOT want their neighborhood middle school in Rosslyn and preferred the suburban style Hamm campus. HB was given the urban location precisely because it was an option school so parents/students would have the right to opt out.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:1) why not Hamm?
2) look closely at WL and how they are adding 600 student seats to an already overcrowded campus via office conversions
W-L’s not overcrowded now and the trailers will disappear. W-L will be close to the size of the larger Fairfax County high schools as the new addition fills up. Wakefield is currently the most overcrowded school. Yorktown was accepting transfers from the W-L zone without preconditions, and that may have been extended to the Wakefield zone. But I’m not sure.
W-L will have the POPULATION of a large Fairfax school (2600) in a building built for 2000 students plus the office addition (some small lunch room, etc) on a campus that is a fraction of the size of a Fairfax school.
Yorktown doesn’t take WL transfers, and least not in last 2 years when our neighbor tried.
Arlington citizens have been pushing for the dense urban concept schools for years. The new HB/Heights school in Rosslyn, the W-L addition, Career Center redevelopment, etc.. At least the W-L addition has a planetarium and doesn’t feel like an office building—like the ones in Ballston. I think it blends into the campus nicely and it overlooks the athletic fields. The building itself is very distinctive.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:1) why not Hamm?
2) look closely at WL and how they are adding 600 student seats to an already overcrowded campus via office conversions
W-L’s not overcrowded now and the trailers will disappear. W-L will be close to the size of the larger Fairfax County high schools as the new addition fills up. Wakefield is currently the most overcrowded school. Yorktown was accepting transfers from the W-L zone without preconditions, and that may have been extended to the Wakefield zone. But I’m not sure.
W-L will have the POPULATION of a large Fairfax school (2600) in a building built for 2000 students plus the office addition (some small lunch room, etc) on a campus that is a fraction of the size of a Fairfax school.
Yorktown doesn’t take WL transfers, and least not in last 2 years when our neighbor tried.
Arlington citizens have been pushing for the dense urban concept schools for years. The new HB/Heights school in Rosslyn, the W-L addition, Career Center redevelopment, etc.. At least the W-L addition has a planetarium and doesn’t feel like an office building—like the ones in Ballston. I think it blends into the campus nicely and it overlooks the athletic fields. The building itself is very distinctive.
You mean the planetarium APS keeps wanting to shut down?
That isn't really an addition - it's just a renovation and re-purposing of the old administrative office building which was next to the planetarium.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:1) why not Hamm?
2) look closely at WL and how they are adding 600 student seats to an already overcrowded campus via office conversions
W-L’s not overcrowded now and the trailers will disappear. W-L will be close to the size of the larger Fairfax County high schools as the new addition fills up. Wakefield is currently the most overcrowded school. Yorktown was accepting transfers from the W-L zone without preconditions, and that may have been extended to the Wakefield zone. But I’m not sure.
W-L will have the POPULATION of a large Fairfax school (2600) in a building built for 2000 students plus the office addition (some small lunch room, etc) on a campus that is a fraction of the size of a Fairfax school.
Yorktown doesn’t take WL transfers, and least not in last 2 years when our neighbor tried.
Arlington citizens have been pushing for the dense urban concept schools for years. The new HB/Heights school in Rosslyn, the W-L addition, Career Center redevelopment, etc.. At least the W-L addition has a planetarium and doesn’t feel like an office building—like the ones in Ballston. I think it blends into the campus nicely and it overlooks the athletic fields. The building itself is very distinctive.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:1) why not Hamm?
2) look closely at WL and how they are adding 600 student seats to an already overcrowded campus via office conversions
W-L’s not overcrowded now and the trailers will disappear. W-L will be close to the size of the larger Fairfax County high schools as the new addition fills up. Wakefield is currently the most overcrowded school. Yorktown was accepting transfers from the W-L zone without preconditions, and that may have been extended to the Wakefield zone. But I’m not sure.
W-L will have the POPULATION of a large Fairfax school (2600) in a building built for 2000 students plus the office addition (some small lunch room, etc) on a campus that is a fraction of the size of a Fairfax school.
Yorktown doesn’t take WL transfers, and least not in last 2 years when our neighbor tried.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:1) why not Hamm?
2) look closely at WL and how they are adding 600 student seats to an already overcrowded campus via office conversions
W-L’s not overcrowded now and the trailers will disappear. W-L will be close to the size of the larger Fairfax County high schools as the new addition fills up. Wakefield is currently the most overcrowded school. Yorktown was accepting transfers from the W-L zone without preconditions, and that may have been extended to the Wakefield zone. But I’m not sure.
Anonymous wrote:1) why not Hamm?
2) look closely at WL and how they are adding 600 student seats to an already overcrowded campus via office conversions
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How do these schools compare to the other middles in APS? There are 6 of them, right?
Dorothy Hamm MS has the best facilities in Arlington since it’s a brand new middle school. It’s made up of students that formerly went to Swanson and Williamsburg. It is still too new to compare to the other 5 middle schools, but the principal is popular and the school is centered around a walkable community with a small town feel like Swanson. The shops at Cherrydale and Lee Hts are nearby. It is also very socio-economically and culturally diverse. It splits between W-L and Yorktown. TJ was mentioned earlier and it is the only middle school with the IB program. It is generally well regarded, and splits between all three Arlington high schools.
Not really. There are a handful of kids who transfer to TJ for the IB program who then go to Yorktown but most of TJ is zoned to Wakefield except for the students who attended Long Branch ES who are zoned to W-L. In the current 6th grade, I believe around a quarter came from Long Branch. But then there are always some TJ kids who will want to follow IB to W-L. Still, the majority typically go to Wakefield. My kids are Long Branch/TJ/W-L and now in HS. A couple of their LB friends chose to transfer to Wakefield to stay with middle school friends.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How do these schools compare to the other middles in APS? There are 6 of them, right?
Dorothy Hamm MS has the best facilities in Arlington since it’s a brand new middle school. It’s made up of students that formerly went to Swanson and Williamsburg. It is still too new to compare to the other 5 middle schools, but the principal is popular and the school is centered around a walkable community with a small town feel like Swanson. The shops at Cherrydale and Lee Hts are nearby. It is also very socio-economically and culturally diverse. It splits between W-L and Yorktown. TJ was mentioned earlier and it is the only middle school with the IB program. It is generally well regarded, and splits between all three Arlington high schools.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Swanson is right next to a small commercial district (Westover). Very different feel than Williamsburg which is more car-centric and suburban. Most of Swanson kids are walkers (not all) and there a big culture of after school in-person socializing in and around Westover. That could be a pro or con depending on your views.
Swanson is no longer over enrolled. But the building is older and smaller, as mentioned.
Swanson just got a new principal, who is a returning principal who many people liked.
Williamsburg is less socio-economically diverse than Swanson.
Williamsburg all goes to Yorktown. Swanson splits to W-L and Yorktown.
Academically, same difference.
A good portion of WMS Students walk up to the Harrison Shopping Center similar to how Swanson students walk over to Westover. It’s a longer walk but they do get that experience. WMS kids also hang out at the Yorktown fields after school. So saying it’s a car centric environment might be true for the morning, but not the afternoon.
I guess. It's a mile away and a big Yorktown hangout too. I wouldn't let my 6th grader at least do that on any kind of regular basis.
I wish more parents felt that way. Harrison shopping center gets overrun with rowdy WMS kids around 2:45/3:00 during the school year.