Anonymous wrote:Are you allowed to transfer from Westfield HS to Chantilly HS without actually moving to an area assigned to Chantilly?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What’s the difference between Chantilly high school and Chantilly academy?
Same location. The academy offers additional vocational and STEM-oriented courses (for example, auto technology, cosmetology, culinary arts, programming, network administration) and is open to students from neighboring schools. Some of the courses offered at the academy like STEM Engineering are also electives at other schools.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:More like Chantilly got the STEM academy when Kathy Smith, who lived in the Chantilly district, was on the School Board. You do know how she drove down the FARMS rates at Poplar Tree, her neighborhood school, and tripled them at Virginia Run during her tenure?
In theory, "school choice" sounds like apple pie, but in practice it tends to magnify disparities among schools.
Did the neighborhood she moved from Poplar Tree also get moved from Chantilly to Westfield?
Anonymous wrote:What’s the difference between Chantilly high school and Chantilly academy?
Anonymous wrote:What’s the difference between Chantilly high school and Chantilly academy?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Another example of parents exploiting pupil placement options in FCPS to engage in demographic arbitrage.
+1. FCPS is full of parents "exploiting" AAP, immersion, magnet ESs, pupil placement for AP, IB, Academy classes, HS foreign language sequence, TJ, etc. to move their child to the school that best meets their individual learning needs and/or interests. How dare these HS parents do Academy, AP/IB etc placement? It should be available to evenyone!! Oh wait. ...
Seriously dude, get a grip. Someone from Westfield pupil places to Chantilly for the Academy. I pupil placed from Chantilly to SLHS in February for IB, and then, once decisions were released, amended that and pupil placed to TJ. All othis is completely legal and above board. It is not like committing residency fraud, etc. If you are against school choice, take it up with the school board.
You sound like a real jerk. Not everyone is equally situated to take advantage of these "choices," and there's nothing wrong with making sure those who do have bona fide reasons.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We have a rising senior at Westfield. Our kid seems to be okay with it, and we have no real complaints. Excellent student, athlete, musician, and enjoys the mix of kids from a lot of backgrounds. His core best friends are still mostly kids he knew from the AAP center middle school. He'd be fine at any of the schools around here. If I could afford to live in the zone, I'd rather send my kids to Chantilly.
IDK how much you paid for your house, but most people are not priced out of Chantilly. We have kids who went Carson / Chantilly for AAP, and I don't think the drop off in house prices is that noticeable when you drive down Centreville Road toward Herndon.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:More like Chantilly got the STEM academy when Kathy Smith, who lived in the Chantilly district, was on the School Board. You do know how she drove down the FARMS rates at Poplar Tree, her neighborhood school, and tripled them at Virginia Run during her tenure?
In theory, "school choice" sounds like apple pie, but in practice it tends to magnify disparities among schools.
Did the neighborhood she moved from Poplar Tree also get moved from Chantilly to Westfield?
DP. Yes.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:More like Chantilly got the STEM academy when Kathy Smith, who lived in the Chantilly district, was on the School Board. You do know how she drove down the FARMS rates at Poplar Tree, her neighborhood school, and tripled them at Virginia Run during her tenure?
In theory, "school choice" sounds like apple pie, but in practice it tends to magnify disparities among schools.
Did the neighborhood she moved from Poplar Tree also get moved from Chantilly to Westfield?
Anonymous wrote:We have a rising senior at Westfield. Our kid seems to be okay with it, and we have no real complaints. Excellent student, athlete, musician, and enjoys the mix of kids from a lot of backgrounds. His core best friends are still mostly kids he knew from the AAP center middle school. He'd be fine at any of the schools around here. If I could afford to live in the zone, I'd rather send my kids to Chantilly.
Anonymous wrote:More like Chantilly got the STEM academy when Kathy Smith, who lived in the Chantilly district, was on the School Board. You do know how she drove down the FARMS rates at Poplar Tree, her neighborhood school, and tripled them at Virginia Run during her tenure?
In theory, "school choice" sounds like apple pie, but in practice it tends to magnify disparities among schools.