Anonymous wrote:Some commenters recommended a shadow day at private to get a sense of the privates. I wonder why they object to 2-3 week shadowing at FCPS claiming you cannot get a sense of school during such a short time. One day shadowing at private is super short in comparison.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. Let's say I talk to my child, and that we agree on sending him to private next year because we don't want the tuition to burn for next year.
Can he still see the FCPS AAP for the first three weeks of semester next year, so that at least he has an idea of what the school is like there. Is there any downside of him being at FCPS AAP for the first three weeks, given he knows he will switch to private for the rest of the year, and he may consider the AAP for the 6th grade?
It's a terrible idea. What if he hates it? There's no point to going to a school for 2 weeks only. Even worse, what if he loves it and makes a best friend? Then he would leave.
More likely, he would not even start to fit in, since his time is so short. So it would just be a miserable useless experience.
Pick a school and send him there.
Look, I don't know why anyone here insisting on not understanding. I already mentioned that he wants to have a choice, and this plan excites him. He does not have any attachment yet to either private or the FCPS AAP center. No friends. No familiarity. He wants to see both. If he likes AAP for the first 3 weeks, that's great information for him and he can continue. If he hates it, great info for him so he can continue with private for the rest of the year.
He has never been in a classroom with more than 15 kids, or at any public school.
This is not his decision. You are the parent. This is your decision.
Let's say our family values his opinion.
I get it, we let our child have a say in staying at his base school or moving to the Center. But that did not involve attending one and then leaving after 3 weeks.
I would be surprised to find too many people who think this is a good idea. Outside of the tuition piece, the disruption is bigger then you are giving credit for. Teachers use the first weeks of school to set routines, help kids get to know their classmates, focus on integrating new kids into the class, and figure out how to manage that particular group of kids. A kid leaving after 3 weeks is going to disrupt that flow.
The history you have laid out for your child points to a lot of movement in his education. Some of that cannot be avoided due to illness, job moves, and the like. You are now suggesting that he start to get to know a group of kids for 3 weeks, then move to another school, and then potentially move again in another year. Different schools have different teaching methods and emphasize different elements of an area. Too much movement will lead to gaps in knowledge that can be an issue later on.
I get the desire to give your child a choice but this is not the way I would do it. I would explain the options and do a pro and con list but moving between the two is not good for the other kids in his class and isn’t going to provide him/you with the experience that will help him/you make an informed decision. The first weeks at school are not normal and 2 days is not enough at the private school.
It sounds like you are set on a path forward but it is rare that anyone on this board agrees on anything and yet pretty much all of the posts are pointing in the same direction.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Answer: people choose to live in Fairfax County for the public schools. If you don't want to send your DC to public school, why bother with Fairfax at all?
This. And a lot of people leave FCPS for private in upper elementary or middle school, so I have a feeling that’s what OP would end up doing. AAP is not that amazing.
Anonymous wrote:Answer: people choose to live in Fairfax County for the public schools. If you don't want to send your DC to public school, why bother with Fairfax at all?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. Let's say I talk to my child, and that we agree on sending him to private next year because we don't want the tuition to burn for next year.
Can he still see the FCPS AAP for the first three weeks of semester next year, so that at least he has an idea of what the school is like there. Is there any downside of him being at FCPS AAP for the first three weeks, given he knows he will switch to private for the rest of the year, and he may consider the AAP for the 6th grade?
It's a terrible idea. What if he hates it? There's no point to going to a school for 2 weeks only. Even worse, what if he loves it and makes a best friend? Then he would leave.
More likely, he would not even start to fit in, since his time is so short. So it would just be a miserable useless experience.
Pick a school and send him there.
Look, I don't know why anyone here insisting on not understanding. I already mentioned that he wants to have a choice, and this plan excites him. He does not have any attachment yet to either private or the FCPS AAP center. No friends. No familiarity. He wants to see both. If he likes AAP for the first 3 weeks, that's great information for him and he can continue. If he hates it, great info for him so he can continue with private for the rest of the year.
He has never been in a classroom with more than 15 kids, or at any public school.
This is not his decision. You are the parent. This is your decision.
Let's say our family values his opinion.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. Let's say I talk to my child, and that we agree on sending him to private next year because we don't want the tuition to burn for next year.
Can he still see the FCPS AAP for the first three weeks of semester next year, so that at least he has an idea of what the school is like there. Is there any downside of him being at FCPS AAP for the first three weeks, given he knows he will switch to private for the rest of the year, and he may consider the AAP for the 6th grade?
It's a terrible idea. What if he hates it? There's no point to going to a school for 2 weeks only. Even worse, what if he loves it and makes a best friend? Then he would leave.
More likely, he would not even start to fit in, since his time is so short. So it would just be a miserable useless experience.
Pick a school and send him there.
Look, I don't know why anyone here insisting on not understanding. I already mentioned that he wants to have a choice, and this plan excites him. He does not have any attachment yet to either private or the FCPS AAP center. No friends. No familiarity. He wants to see both. If he likes AAP for the first 3 weeks, that's great information for him and he can continue. If he hates it, great info for him so he can continue with private for the rest of the year.
He has never been in a classroom with more than 15 kids, or at any public school.
This is not his decision. You are the parent. This is your decision.
Let's say our family values his opinion.
Anonymous wrote:Hello,
We will be moving back from out of state to Fairfax County. Just before we were moving away our child had qualified for FCPS AAP (for 3rd grade back then). Back then we were homeschooling and we applied at AAP as a non-FCPS student, he got in. Then we had to move away for a couple of years. He attended a private school for the last two years we have been out of state. Now he will be in 5th grade when we move back this summer.
We are wondering what to do regarding schooling when we move back. Whether we should put him in AAP or go private (if he gets accepted). He never had a public school experience either here or elsewhere. We thought that an option may be even if he gets accepted to the private, we may consider to send him to public school for AAP for the first 2.5 weeks before private school opens. This way he can get a sense of environment and the large classrooms. When the private opens in 2.5 weeks after the public school, we can put him in the private for a couple of days and then let him decide between the two. After that he continues with either public or private, and we withdraw from the one he does not choose.
So I need opinions about whether logistically this is possible. Would the public school be OK if we withdrew from the FCPS AAP program 3 weeks into the new semester? Would he loose his AAP status if he considers it again in future? I am trying to get a sense of how things would go with the FCPS school if we inform them we don't want to continue throughout the academic year.
We want him to have a choice between AAP in public school and the private school. Both are new schools/environments for him.
Thank you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. Let's say I talk to my child, and that we agree on sending him to private next year because we don't want the tuition to burn for next year.
Can he still see the FCPS AAP for the first three weeks of semester next year, so that at least he has an idea of what the school is like there. Is there any downside of him being at FCPS AAP for the first three weeks, given he knows he will switch to private for the rest of the year, and he may consider the AAP for the 6th grade?
It's a terrible idea. What if he hates it? There's no point to going to a school for 2 weeks only. Even worse, what if he loves it and makes a best friend? Then he would leave.
More likely, he would not even start to fit in, since his time is so short. So it would just be a miserable useless experience.
Pick a school and send him there.
Look, I don't know why anyone here insisting on not understanding. I already mentioned that he wants to have a choice, and this plan excites him. He does not have any attachment yet to either private or the FCPS AAP center. No friends. No familiarity. He wants to see both. If he likes AAP for the first 3 weeks, that's great information for him and he can continue. If he hates it, great info for him so he can continue with private for the rest of the year.
He has never been in a classroom with more than 15 kids, or at any public school.
This is not his decision. You are the parent. This is your decision.
Let's say our family values his opinion.
You decided to homeschool him. You decided to send him to private school. Now you need to decide what to do for the next school year.
Having him "trial" one classroom in one school before sending him to a different school is disruptive and will not give him an idea of anything. It will just be an additional transition for him to deal with.
It sounds like you are waffling. Make a decision for your DC. Be his parent, not his friend.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. Let's say I talk to my child, and that we agree on sending him to private next year because we don't want the tuition to burn for next year.
Can he still see the FCPS AAP for the first three weeks of semester next year, so that at least he has an idea of what the school is like there. Is there any downside of him being at FCPS AAP for the first three weeks, given he knows he will switch to private for the rest of the year, and he may consider the AAP for the 6th grade?
It's a terrible idea. What if he hates it? There's no point to going to a school for 2 weeks only. Even worse, what if he loves it and makes a best friend? Then he would leave.
More likely, he would not even start to fit in, since his time is so short. So it would just be a miserable useless experience.
Pick a school and send him there.
Look, I don't know why anyone here insisting on not understanding. I already mentioned that he wants to have a choice, and this plan excites him. He does not have any attachment yet to either private or the FCPS AAP center. No friends. No familiarity. He wants to see both. If he likes AAP for the first 3 weeks, that's great information for him and he can continue. If he hates it, great info for him so he can continue with private for the rest of the year.
He has never been in a classroom with more than 15 kids, or at any public school.
This is not his decision. You are the parent. This is your decision.
Let's say our family values his opinion.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. Let's say I talk to my child, and that we agree on sending him to private next year because we don't want the tuition to burn for next year.
Can he still see the FCPS AAP for the first three weeks of semester next year, so that at least he has an idea of what the school is like there. Is there any downside of him being at FCPS AAP for the first three weeks, given he knows he will switch to private for the rest of the year, and he may consider the AAP for the 6th grade?
It's a terrible idea. What if he hates it? There's no point to going to a school for 2 weeks only. Even worse, what if he loves it and makes a best friend? Then he would leave.
More likely, he would not even start to fit in, since his time is so short. So it would just be a miserable useless experience.
Pick a school and send him there.
Look, I don't know why anyone here insisting on not understanding. I already mentioned that he wants to have a choice, and this plan excites him. He does not have any attachment yet to either private or the FCPS AAP center. No friends. No familiarity. He wants to see both. If he likes AAP for the first 3 weeks, that's great information for him and he can continue. If he hates it, great info for him so he can continue with private for the rest of the year.
He has never been in a classroom with more than 15 kids, or at any public school.
This is not his decision. You are the parent. This is your decision.