Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They will move heaven and earth to avoid a not fully accredited school. As a PP mentioned if a school slips out of accreditation, people who are zoned for that school have the automatic option to attend elsewhere. It creates potential overcrowding situations at the receiving schools. And the optics are absolutely terrible.
This is how/why they picked AAP center schools at the ES level.
Anonymous wrote:They will move heaven and earth to avoid a not fully accredited school. As a PP mentioned if a school slips out of accreditation, people who are zoned for that school have the automatic option to attend elsewhere. It creates potential overcrowding situations at the receiving schools. And the optics are absolutely terrible.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They will move heaven and earth to avoid a not fully accredited school. As a PP mentioned if a school slips out of accreditation, people who are zoned for that school have the automatic option to attend elsewhere. It creates potential overcrowding situations at the receiving schools. And the optics are absolutely terrible.
The state standards for accreditation are not particularly tough. I don’t see any FCPS schools falling all the way to losing accreditation.
Our elementary school was in jeopardy about 7 years ago. FCPS pre-emptively made a few moves including sending the principal to another school.
I remember a lot of discussion on here in 2014-2015ish about Lewis (then Lee) and how FCPS was legitimately worried that it could lose accreditation. They would have rather closed it than have a HS that wasn’t fully accredited. There were tentative plans in place for where to move the elementary feeders.
It would be pretty big news if a school was legitimately close to losing accreditation - it wouldn’t happen overnight. Again, definitely not worried about anything in FCPS right now.
Actually we have several elementary schools that are dangerously close to losing accreditation.
Just because schools are Title 1 and in “needs intensive support” doesn’t mean they are really close to losing accreditation. If years-long troubled Jefferson-Houston in Alexandria can squeak by with “conditionally” year after year, everything in FCPS should be perfectly fine.
+1. Particularly with Democrats calling the shots in Richmond. For better or worse, accreditation is now seen as a political exercise where Republicans will look to find ways to strip public schools of accreditation to promote vouchers and Democrats will do anything to keep schools accredited to appease teachers’ unions.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They will move heaven and earth to avoid a not fully accredited school. As a PP mentioned if a school slips out of accreditation, people who are zoned for that school have the automatic option to attend elsewhere. It creates potential overcrowding situations at the receiving schools. And the optics are absolutely terrible.
The state standards for accreditation are not particularly tough. I don’t see any FCPS schools falling all the way to losing accreditation.
Our elementary school was in jeopardy about 7 years ago. FCPS pre-emptively made a few moves including sending the principal to another school.
I remember a lot of discussion on here in 2014-2015ish about Lewis (then Lee) and how FCPS was legitimately worried that it could lose accreditation. They would have rather closed it than have a HS that wasn’t fully accredited. There were tentative plans in place for where to move the elementary feeders.
It would be pretty big news if a school was legitimately close to losing accreditation - it wouldn’t happen overnight. Again, definitely not worried about anything in FCPS right now.
Actually we have several elementary schools that are dangerously close to losing accreditation.
Just because schools are Title 1 and in “needs intensive support” doesn’t mean they are really close to losing accreditation. If years-long troubled Jefferson-Houston in Alexandria can squeak by with “conditionally” year after year, everything in FCPS should be perfectly fine.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They will move heaven and earth to avoid a not fully accredited school. As a PP mentioned if a school slips out of accreditation, people who are zoned for that school have the automatic option to attend elsewhere. It creates potential overcrowding situations at the receiving schools. And the optics are absolutely terrible.
The state standards for accreditation are not particularly tough. I don’t see any FCPS schools falling all the way to losing accreditation.
Our elementary school was in jeopardy about 7 years ago. FCPS pre-emptively made a few moves including sending the principal to another school.
I remember a lot of discussion on here in 2014-2015ish about Lewis (then Lee) and how FCPS was legitimately worried that it could lose accreditation. They would have rather closed it than have a HS that wasn’t fully accredited. There were tentative plans in place for where to move the elementary feeders.
It would be pretty big news if a school was legitimately close to losing accreditation - it wouldn’t happen overnight. Again, definitely not worried about anything in FCPS right now.
Actually we have several elementary schools that are dangerously close to losing accreditation.
Anonymous wrote:names?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They will move heaven and earth to avoid a not fully accredited school. As a PP mentioned if a school slips out of accreditation, people who are zoned for that school have the automatic option to attend elsewhere. It creates potential overcrowding situations at the receiving schools. And the optics are absolutely terrible.
The state standards for accreditation are not particularly tough. I don’t see any FCPS schools falling all the way to losing accreditation.
Our elementary school was in jeopardy about 7 years ago. FCPS pre-emptively made a few moves including sending the principal to another school.
I remember a lot of discussion on here in 2014-2015ish about Lewis (then Lee) and how FCPS was legitimately worried that it could lose accreditation. They would have rather closed it than have a HS that wasn’t fully accredited. There were tentative plans in place for where to move the elementary feeders.
It would be pretty big news if a school was legitimately close to losing accreditation - it wouldn’t happen overnight. Again, definitely not worried about anything in FCPS right now.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:At one point in past Justice High School lost accreditation; don't know what supports or options were offered at that time though. We remember being quite concerned as it was our zoned HS.
I don’t believe this is true. There may have been a point where it was conditionally accredited or accredited with a warning, but it remained accredited. It wasn’t like at Dogwood, mentioned earlier, where there was a period in which students zoned for the school had an automatic right to transfer to another school.
Thank you for clarification; sorry if I got that wrong, it was enough to worry us at the time. -OP here.
You may be a PP, but you are not the OP of this thread.—OP
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They will move heaven and earth to avoid a not fully accredited school. As a PP mentioned if a school slips out of accreditation, people who are zoned for that school have the automatic option to attend elsewhere. It creates potential overcrowding situations at the receiving schools. And the optics are absolutely terrible.
The state standards for accreditation are not particularly tough. I don’t see any FCPS schools falling all the way to losing accreditation.
Our elementary school was in jeopardy about 7 years ago. FCPS pre-emptively made a few moves including sending the principal to another school.
I remember a lot of discussion on here in 2014-2015ish about Lewis (then Lee) and how FCPS was legitimately worried that it could lose accreditation. They would have rather closed it than have a HS that wasn’t fully accredited. There were tentative plans in place for where to move the elementary feeders.
It would be pretty big news if a school was legitimately close to losing accreditation - it wouldn’t happen overnight. Again, definitely not worried about anything in FCPS right now.
Really? So, it would be a complete surprise if one were to fall into this category?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They will move heaven and earth to avoid a not fully accredited school. As a PP mentioned if a school slips out of accreditation, people who are zoned for that school have the automatic option to attend elsewhere. It creates potential overcrowding situations at the receiving schools. And the optics are absolutely terrible.
The state standards for accreditation are not particularly tough. I don’t see any FCPS schools falling all the way to losing accreditation.
Our elementary school was in jeopardy about 7 years ago. FCPS pre-emptively made a few moves including sending the principal to another school.
I remember a lot of discussion on here in 2014-2015ish about Lewis (then Lee) and how FCPS was legitimately worried that it could lose accreditation. They would have rather closed it than have a HS that wasn’t fully accredited. There were tentative plans in place for where to move the elementary feeders.
It would be pretty big news if a school was legitimately close to losing accreditation - it wouldn’t happen overnight. Again, definitely not worried about anything in FCPS right now.
Really? So, it would be a complete surprise if one were to fall into this category?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They will move heaven and earth to avoid a not fully accredited school. As a PP mentioned if a school slips out of accreditation, people who are zoned for that school have the automatic option to attend elsewhere. It creates potential overcrowding situations at the receiving schools. And the optics are absolutely terrible.
The state standards for accreditation are not particularly tough. I don’t see any FCPS schools falling all the way to losing accreditation.
Our elementary school was in jeopardy about 7 years ago. FCPS pre-emptively made a few moves including sending the principal to another school.
I remember a lot of discussion on here in 2014-2015ish about Lewis (then Lee) and how FCPS was legitimately worried that it could lose accreditation. They would have rather closed it than have a HS that wasn’t fully accredited. There were tentative plans in place for where to move the elementary feeders.
It would be pretty big news if a school was legitimately close to losing accreditation - it wouldn’t happen overnight. Again, definitely not worried about anything in FCPS right now.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They will move heaven and earth to avoid a not fully accredited school. As a PP mentioned if a school slips out of accreditation, people who are zoned for that school have the automatic option to attend elsewhere. It creates potential overcrowding situations at the receiving schools. And the optics are absolutely terrible.
The state standards for accreditation are not particularly tough. I don’t see any FCPS schools falling all the way to losing accreditation.
Our elementary school was in jeopardy about 7 years ago. FCPS pre-emptively made a few moves including sending the principal to another school.