Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What do people have against racial/cultural/SES diversity?
Obviously something. Wish I knew what it was. Fear, I guess.
Pretty much. My kids attend a title 1 school, have done really well there and we have been very happy with the teachers. They challenge teh kids who need more challenging while working with kids who need more help. Half our neighborhood does private because many "want a catholic education" code for "school with more white kids with higher SES backgrounds."
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't think forcible busing of kids from North Arlington to South Arlington is the answer. I know that if someone tried to bus my kid all the way across the country to a Title I school, I'd vote with my feet and move to Falls Church, Fairfax, Montgomery or DC. I made some major compromises and sacrifices to live in a good school boundary.
Note: I'm not fighting the plans to put more affordable housing in North Arlington. If that's how they plan to un-concentrate the poverty, I'm fine with that.
They aren't going to bus. That would be a nightmare for everyone. The push back! Gah!
No, they need to allow south Arlington to gentrify. Libby Garvey came out and basically admitted that they have been concentrating poverty into one area. This will all be some much easier if the CB will acknowledge reality. Seems like they might be finally starting to get their heads out of the sand.
I also think this is the first time they've started to experience real organized push back from south Arlington home owners. Thank god!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What do people have against racial/cultural/SES diversity?
Obviously something. Wish I knew what it was. Fear, I guess.
Pretty much. My kids attend a title 1 school, have done really well there and we have been very happy with the teachers. They challenge teh kids who need more challenging while working with kids who need more help. Half our neighborhood does private because many "want a catholic education" code for "school with more white kids with higher SES backgrounds."
Not necessarily. We did private and it was code for "the kids behavior problems are over the top"
Pretending that there are not serious problems in schools with "diversity" is just stupid.
There are lots of problems. A good portion of the school admin, teachers and work is really dedicated to social services. When you have to spend 50-75% of time on those issues, it doesn't leave much time for education. So schools in N. Arl, the teachers and admins are not worrying about little Larla not having enough to eat and then have to spend time finding something for Larla to eat, contacting her parents, helping them get set up with food stamps, etc and so forth. Then there is little Larlo who doesn't have enough schools supplies, and Larlalette didn't have shoes and keep going 50times over and the whole school day has been used up and nothing has been taught.
Anonymous wrote:I don't think forcible busing of kids from North Arlington to South Arlington is the answer. I know that if someone tried to bus my kid all the way across the country to a Title I school, I'd vote with my feet and move to Falls Church, Fairfax, Montgomery or DC. I made some major compromises and sacrifices to live in a good school boundary.
Note: I'm not fighting the plans to put more affordable housing in North Arlington. If that's how they plan to un-concentrate the poverty, I'm fine with that.
Anonymous wrote:I fully recognize some people don't have choices. But you questioned the veracity of my story, as if no one could make that choice. Plenty of us do exactly that. I'm not saying S. Arl schools are terrible, but they are not the best that Arl County has to offer educationally.
Anonymous wrote:Believe what you want. If you can afford N. Arlington and highly value education, unless diversity is your deciding factor, you should move. I lived it. But I'm not invested in convincing anyone. I don't have to be preoccupied with whether my kids are being challenged or how/when to Supplement in math or science or anything else. They are getting what they need (2 kids) in their N. Arlington elementary. It was not AWFUl before, just not excellent.
Anonymous wrote:With some exceptions--Oakridge, Henry--S. Arlington schools are academically inferior to N. Arlington schools. S. Arl parents & APS will tell you that all Arlington elementaries are excellent. They are heavily invested in believing that, or at least saying it. But the dirty secret is that some are far more excellent than others. I lived it. Moved my kids from S. Arl to N. Arl elementary. Tried to stick it out in my S. Arl school because I loved my house. But my kids' education prevailed. I didn't realize HOW different the academic experience would be. It's like a tale of two cities. Don't regret the move for a second. There is less socioeconomic diversity & that's a shame. But not worth my kids' educational experience.