Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The problem is that if you want to have neighborhood schools in a densely populated area, you're likely to end up with segregated schools. I want my kids to be able to walk, although for the right program, I'd put them on a bus. (For me, H-B or a duplicate would be the right program; for a lot of parents, ATS or ASFS through middle or high school would be it. I think popular NArl programs should be moved south, but then we'd be taking away the neighborhood schools in SArl, which would be obnoxious.)
ASFS is a neighborhood school, not a program like ATS.
But it doesn't have to be. They could put a regular elementary school in that space, and then people in the neighborhood who don't do immersion would not be taking up spaces in a very popular program when all they want/need is to NOT be in immersion.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:http://www.apsva.us/cms/lib2/VA01000586/Centricity/Domain/110/Preliminary_Boundary_Concepts.pdf
Thoughts?
We are at Glebe and looks like we will move with all but one of the options.
Why are you even posting this? This is internal APS stuff that has not even gone to the School Board yet. No one should think that this is anything close to what the final proposal will be, let alone the final decision.
That's harsh. The information is available on the APS website. Don't criticize the OP; criticize the fools at APS who posted it on the website even though it's a freakin' mess.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:http://www.apsva.us/cms/lib2/VA01000586/Centricity/Domain/110/Preliminary_Boundary_Concepts.pdf
Thoughts?
We are at Glebe and looks like we will move with all but one of the options.
Why are you even posting this? This is internal APS stuff that has not even gone to the School Board yet. No one should think that this is anything close to what the final proposal will be, let alone the final decision.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What browser are you using? APS loves Google, so maybe try Chrome if you haven't. I did better with Explorer than Firefox, although neither worked completely.
You'd think an organization that can't stop yammering about how important technology is would be able to come up with something that works in several browsers.
Tried Safari, Firefox and Chrome, and nothing comes up. Bizarre. Maybe I'll try later.
Honestly, you don't want to see this. It is a total jumble of information that will produce maximum confusion and outrage. Whoever in APS is responsible for letting this see the light of day deserves to be fired.
Anonymous wrote:http://www.apsva.us/cms/lib2/VA01000586/Centricity/Domain/110/Preliminary_Boundary_Concepts.pdf
Thoughts?
We are at Glebe and looks like we will move with all but one of the options.
Anonymous wrote:How can anyone even read this? Honestly, I can't tell what the streets are to find my house.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The problem is that if you want to have neighborhood schools in a densely populated area, you're likely to end up with segregated schools. I want my kids to be able to walk, although for the right program, I'd put them on a bus. (For me, H-B or a duplicate would be the right program; for a lot of parents, ATS or ASFS through middle or high school would be it. I think popular NArl programs should be moved south, but then we'd be taking away the neighborhood schools in SArl, which would be obnoxious.)
ASFS is a neighborhood school, not a program like ATS.
Anonymous wrote:The problem is that if you want to have neighborhood schools in a densely populated area, you're likely to end up with segregated schools. I want my kids to be able to walk, although for the right program, I'd put them on a bus. (For me, H-B or a duplicate would be the right program; for a lot of parents, ATS or ASFS through middle or high school would be it. I think popular NArl programs should be moved south, but then we'd be taking away the neighborhood schools in SArl, which would be obnoxious.)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What browser are you using? APS loves Google, so maybe try Chrome if you haven't. I did better with Explorer than Firefox, although neither worked completely.
You'd think an organization that can't stop yammering about how important technology is would be able to come up with something that works in several browsers.
Tried Safari, Firefox and Chrome, and nothing comes up. Bizarre. Maybe I'll try later.
Anonymous wrote:What browser are you using? APS loves Google, so maybe try Chrome if you haven't. I did better with Explorer than Firefox, although neither worked completely.
You'd think an organization that can't stop yammering about how important technology is would be able to come up with something that works in several browsers.