Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hopefully, but probably not next year
There are a perplexingly large number of people, including parents, people at Gatehouse, and some of the school board who are anti-center and unaware that center schools are extremely popular and a big draw for the county. So strange.
Nope. I have two, non-prepped, Level IV students and I purposely kept them at the base school program because I wanted them to be challenged but also have a solid EQ (for example, not acting superior to their classmates). I know plenty of parents who made the same choice.
EQ comes from the home, not from the school. It's not like centers are full of snobs and have-nots and local schools are egalitarian utopias. Kids who are snobs get it from their parents.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hopefully, but probably not next year
There are a perplexingly large number of people, including parents, people at Gatehouse, and some of the school board who are anti-center and unaware that center schools are extremely popular and a big draw for the county. So strange.
Nope. I have two, non-prepped, Level IV students and I purposely kept them at the base school program because I wanted them to be challenged but also have a solid EQ (for example, not acting superior to their classmates). I know plenty of parents who made the same choice.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hopefully, but probably not next year
There are a perplexingly large number of people, including parents, people at Gatehouse, and some of the school board who are anti-center and unaware that center schools are extremely popular and a big draw for the county. So strange.
Nope. I have two, non-prepped, Level IV students and I purposely kept them at the base school program because I wanted them to be challenged but also have a solid EQ (for example, not acting superior to their classmates). I know plenty of parents who made the same choice.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hopefully, but probably not next year
There are a perplexingly large number of people, including parents, people at Gatehouse, and some of the school board who are anti-center and unaware that center schools are extremely popular and a big draw for the county. So strange.
You mean that getting rid of centers will also reduce the number of students in over crowded schools? Win win
Do you want to snap those students, like Thanos? The students won't vanish, they will just move around.
If center schools go away, then former center schools will have their catchment area enlarged, almost doubled. And other schools will have their catchment areas reduced.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If center school go away, low ses or even some mid ses school aap classes will probably be mixed with non aap class and maybe principal placement will go away too, it may not be good for low ses school, those few really advanced won’t have a chance. However, like others said, it will be good for high ses school as more capacity for their own school students.
It will be bad for the former center kids at low and mid ses schools, but great for the regular kids. Teachers teach to the middle, so raising the middle helps those near the middle
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hopefully, but probably not next year
There are a perplexingly large number of people, including parents, people at Gatehouse, and some of the school board who are anti-center and unaware that center schools are extremely popular and a big draw for the county. So strange.
You mean that getting rid of centers will also reduce the number of students in over crowded schools? Win win
Do you want to snap those students, like Thanos? The students won't vanish, they will just move around.
If center schools go away, then former center schools will have their catchment area enlarged, almost doubled. And other schools will have their catchment areas reduced.
Maybe at some schools. I'm in-bounds for a center and if everybody went to their in-bounds school then mine would be right at capacity (as calculated with modulars) instead of over.
Anonymous wrote:If center school go away, low ses or even some mid ses school aap classes will probably be mixed with non aap class and maybe principal placement will go away too, it may not be good for low ses school, those few really advanced won’t have a chance. However, like others said, it will be good for high ses school as more capacity for their own school students.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hopefully, but probably not next year
There are a perplexingly large number of people, including parents, people at Gatehouse, and some of the school board who are anti-center and unaware that center schools are extremely popular and a big draw for the county. So strange.
You mean that getting rid of centers will also reduce the number of students in over crowded schools? Win win
Do you want to snap those students, like Thanos? The students won't vanish, they will just move around.
If center schools go away, then former center schools will have their catchment area enlarged, almost doubled. And other schools will have their catchment areas reduced.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hopefully, but probably not next year
There are a perplexingly large number of people, including parents, people at Gatehouse, and some of the school board who are anti-center and unaware that center schools are extremely popular and a big draw for the county. So strange.
Nope. I have two, non-prepped, Level IV students and I purposely kept them at the base school program because I wanted them to be challenged but also have a solid EQ (for example, not acting superior to their classmates). I know plenty of parents who made the same choice.