Anonymous wrote:
There are two under enrolled MS 2-3 miles from Kenmoor (Everett Just, Gholson). Kenmoor's boundary area is pretty small compared to other MS in the district and they are surrounded by other MS in fairly close proximity. Some of the kids probably live closer to Gholson or Just than Kenmoor.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My child moved one spot higher on the waitlist for 6th grade TAG at Greenbelt Middle. So one kid got it. My other child is on the waitlist for 8th grade TAG at Greenbelt Middle - no movement at all. Last year, I think 4 kids got in there for 7th grade because my child moved up 4 spots but didn't get in. What is so ridiculous is the time and money spent for so few spots. What a waste of tax dollars. This is our 4th year of trying to get into middle school TAG. There really isn't room in PGCPS for good students. My kids attend regular PGCPS and they are are especially tired of classmates who disrupt class and substitute teachers who are abysmal. Our only hope is to test into Roosevelt. One of our kids goes there and is pleased. It's like living in China - your life depends on how you do on one test when you are 14.
I'm wondering if the reason there was no movement is that kids that live within the boundary for a TAG middle school don't need to do the lottery to get space into the TAG program. Maybe because they get automatic entry to the TAG middle schools, the specialty office can't offer any additional spaces to lottery families because they need to save space and see how many of the neighborhood kids register before going through the waitlist.
TAG identified kids who live in bounds for the TAG MS Magnet still need to apply for the lottery to get a slot if they are not getting continuity to MS through attending a TAG magnet ES. i.e. you can live inbounds at Kenmoor and may not be able to attend the TAG stream even if you are TAG identified.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes, that would be really unpopular. Move local kids further away so kids who live further from the school can come there....?
Sure, but PGCPS is mandated to provide TAG services to these kids and they are failing to do so in a meaningful way.
There are two under enrolled MS 2-3 miles from Kenmoor (Everett Just, Gholson). Kenmoor's boundary area is pretty small compared to other MS in the district and they are surrounded by other MS in fairly close proximity. Some of the kids probably live closer to Gholson or Just than Kenmoor.
I'm glad that I'm not making the decisions but from a purely logical point of view adding TAG classes at Kenmoor would be the most economical way to achieve more MS opportunities.
Um, no. Adding TAG classes to the under enrolled middle schools is makes more sense economically and from an educational perspective than relocated all the other non-TAG kids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes, that would be really unpopular. Move local kids further away so kids who live further from the school can come there....?
Sure, but PGCPS is mandated to provide TAG services to these kids and they are failing to do so in a meaningful way.
There are two under enrolled MS 2-3 miles from Kenmoor (Everett Just, Gholson). Kenmoor's boundary area is pretty small compared to other MS in the district and they are surrounded by other MS in fairly close proximity. Some of the kids probably live closer to Gholson or Just than Kenmoor.
I'm glad that I'm not making the decisions but from a purely logical point of view adding TAG classes at Kenmoor would be the most economical way to achieve more MS opportunities.
Anonymous wrote:Yes, that would be really unpopular. Move local kids further away so kids who live further from the school can come there....?
Anonymous wrote:No, the only way to get into the TAG program is to qualify academically. Where you live has no influence on acceptance. The program fills up in the early years and that's that. Open seats at the middle school level are few to none because Grade 5 kids get first dips for Grade 6 (middle school). They don't have to re-test, just maintain good grades to remain in the program.
Honestly, when county leadership says they want more middle school families in PGCPS they know it's BS. The formula for getting academically-minded students into the school system is not a mystery. It's all about political will. The county has only so much money. How are we going to spend it?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My child moved one spot higher on the waitlist for 6th grade TAG at Greenbelt Middle. So one kid got it. My other child is on the waitlist for 8th grade TAG at Greenbelt Middle - no movement at all. Last year, I think 4 kids got in there for 7th grade because my child moved up 4 spots but didn't get in. What is so ridiculous is the time and money spent for so few spots. What a waste of tax dollars. This is our 4th year of trying to get into middle school TAG. There really isn't room in PGCPS for good students. My kids attend regular PGCPS and they are are especially tired of classmates who disrupt class and substitute teachers who are abysmal. Our only hope is to test into Roosevelt. One of our kids goes there and is pleased. It's like living in China - your life depends on how you do on one test when you are 14.
I'm wondering if the reason there was no movement is that kids that live within the boundary for a TAG middle school don't need to do the lottery to get space into the TAG program. Maybe because they get automatic entry to the TAG middle schools, the specialty office can't offer any additional spaces to lottery families because they need to save space and see how many of the neighborhood kids register before going through the waitlist.
Anonymous wrote:My child moved one spot higher on the waitlist for 6th grade TAG at Greenbelt Middle. So one kid got it. My other child is on the waitlist for 8th grade TAG at Greenbelt Middle - no movement at all. Last year, I think 4 kids got in there for 7th grade because my child moved up 4 spots but didn't get in. What is so ridiculous is the time and money spent for so few spots. What a waste of tax dollars. This is our 4th year of trying to get into middle school TAG. There really isn't room in PGCPS for good students. My kids attend regular PGCPS and they are are especially tired of classmates who disrupt class and substitute teachers who are abysmal. Our only hope is to test into Roosevelt. One of our kids goes there and is pleased. It's like living in China - your life depends on how you do on one test when you are 14.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
An example of the TAG MS issue can be seen by comparing Spellman (Great School Rating of 6) to Rockledge (Great School Rating of 6). Spellman lost about 12% of the class between 1st and 2nd grade last year. Rockledge's enrollment increased by 1. Acceptance rates to their TAG magnets are basically the same. So what is one of the apparent differences? Spellman feeds into Gholson (GS rating of 3) while Rockledge feeds into Samuel Ogle MS (GS rating of 7) and Bowie HS.
12% of Spellman's 1st grade class isn't going to a TAG center school. There are what, at most 120 kids there in grade 1. 14 of them aren't going to Highland Park. They might be leaving for other reasons though.
Anonymous wrote:
An example of the TAG MS issue can be seen by comparing Spellman (Great School Rating of 6) to Rockledge (Great School Rating of 6). Spellman lost about 12% of the class between 1st and 2nd grade last year. Rockledge's enrollment increased by 1. Acceptance rates to their TAG magnets are basically the same. So what is one of the apparent differences? Spellman feeds into Gholson (GS rating of 3) while Rockledge feeds into Samuel Ogle MS (GS rating of 7) and Bowie HS.