Anonymous wrote:It will be a community based Level IV AAP program for the 2014-15 year. We just got the letter in Tuesday folder so I'm sure all base Franklin kids will get them this week. Nice of them to inform people 3 days after the referral date closed (letter dated Feb 10). I chose not to refer to AAP (we were not here in 2nd grade) as was happy with WM and Franklin Honors, so I cannot believe they are doing this now, when they have given parents like me no option to refer. You can bet I am complaining...
Info night is Feb 20th, 6.15 info on AAP, 7pm general meeting.
Anonymous wrote:It will be a community based Level IV AAP program for the 2014-15 year. We just got the letter in Tuesday folder so I'm sure all base Franklin kids will get them this week. Nice of them to inform people 3 days after the referral date closed (letter dated Feb 10). I chose not to refer to AAP (we were not here in 2nd grade) as was happy with WM and Franklin Honors, so I cannot believe they are doing this now, when they have given parents like me no option to refer. You can bet I am complaining...
Info night is Feb 20th, 6.15 info on AAP, 7pm general meeting.
Anonymous wrote:Franklin just sent out a letter saying they are offering AAP this coming year... I have so many questions about this-information night next week!
Anonymous wrote:Did they skip middle school?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Actually we were considering moving to Waples Mill, but it's a huge drawback to have kids transitioning all over the place. The area doesn't have any central location nearby to give it an identity, it's sports teams are unaligned (little league I think is in boundary with Chantilly or something crazy like that), the AAP centers at elementary and middle are un-aligned, and Oakton High School itself is a weird combination of kids from various middle schools. Why should Crossfield, an older school, get a school that is very undercapacity and Waples Mill Road right down the street is so overcapacity that it can't even have a LLIV program?
What a load of bull!?!?
Anonymous wrote:Actually we were considering moving to Waples Mill, but it's a huge drawback to have kids transitioning all over the place. The area doesn't have any central location nearby to give it an identity, it's sports teams are unaligned (little league I think is in boundary with Chantilly or something crazy like that), the AAP centers at elementary and middle are un-aligned, and Oakton High School itself is a weird combination of kids from various middle schools. Why should Crossfield, an older school, get a school that is very undercapacity and Waples Mill Road right down the street is so overcapacity that it can't even have a LLIV program?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Actually we were considering moving to Waples Mill, but it's a huge drawback to have kids transitioning all over the place. The area doesn't have any central location nearby to give it an identity, it's sports teams are unaligned (little league I think is in boundary with Chantilly or something crazy like that), the AAP centers at elementary and middle are un-aligned, and Oakton High School itself is a weird combination of kids from various middle schools. Why should Crossfield, an older school, get a school that is very undercapacity and Waples Mill Road right down the street is so overcapacity that it can't even have a LLIV program?
o.k.![]()
Anonymous wrote:Actually we were considering moving to Waples Mill, but it's a huge drawback to have kids transitioning all over the place. The area doesn't have any central location nearby to give it an identity, it's sports teams are unaligned (little league I think is in boundary with Chantilly or something crazy like that), the AAP centers at elementary and middle are un-aligned, and Oakton High School itself is a weird combination of kids from various middle schools. Why should Crossfield, an older school, get a school that is very undercapacity and Waples Mill Road right down the street is so overcapacity that it can't even have a LLIV program?