Anonymous wrote:They're not choice schools. They're chance schools.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:12:28 the principal has been preparing for years in case the school is expanded. We've talked about it a bunch of times in PTA board meetings. I personally assume that 4 classes per grade will be the norm, though I'm not sure how they'll squeeze more kids into the lunch schedule - the youngest kids already eat lunch at 10:20, which is probably the case at the most crowded elementaries in the county too.
Yep - added more trailers this year, and the entire 2nd grade is in trailers now -- 4 classes. Poor Mr. Godwin who got a break last year from his trailer is back out there, I guess!
There are only three second grade classes next year. That grade is not a "bubble" class. My rising second grade son is quite excited to be in the trailers - the older kids at school have declared that it's "cool!" I believe they will be using the fourth trailer classroom as some kind of communal space (like the K/1st hallway pod), but I'm not sure about that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:your chance of getting into ATS- slim- they admit somewhere between 25%-50% of kids that apply.
your chance of getting into Montessori- pretty good. There has not historically been a waitlist for montessori at the elementary level.
Your chance of getting into Immersion- pretty good if you are willing to be flexible. If you don't immediately get into your zoned immersion school, start pushing to be admitted to the other one, you probably will be (For the last several years Key has taken kids off the Claremont waiting list.) If the immersion waitlists continue to grow, APS is open to the idea of starting a 3rd elementary immersion school. There are a lot of educational benefits to immersion, particularly for native Spanish speakers.
Your chance of getting into Campbell- this is a wild card, previously there were very few zoned schools for which you could apply to Campbell. This is changing in a year and the entire county will be able to apply. I suspect that Campbell will become like ATS- slim chances.
I don't think that's true. Much slimmer chances. The year we applied, after siblings and VPI were accounted for, there were only like 20 spaces. The waitlist was at least 200 deep IIRC (a friend's child was number 189).
Are the spots exclusively for VPI or any low-income family in the montessori program?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:your chance of getting into ATS- slim- they admit somewhere between 25%-50% of kids that apply.
your chance of getting into Montessori- pretty good. There has not historically been a waitlist for montessori at the elementary level.
Your chance of getting into Immersion- pretty good if you are willing to be flexible. If you don't immediately get into your zoned immersion school, start pushing to be admitted to the other one, you probably will be (For the last several years Key has taken kids off the Claremont waiting list.) If the immersion waitlists continue to grow, APS is open to the idea of starting a 3rd elementary immersion school. There are a lot of educational benefits to immersion, particularly for native Spanish speakers.
Your chance of getting into Campbell- this is a wild card, previously there were very few zoned schools for which you could apply to Campbell. This is changing in a year and the entire county will be able to apply. I suspect that Campbell will become like ATS- slim chances.
I don't think that's true. Much slimmer chances. The year we applied, after siblings and VPI were accounted for, there were only like 20 spaces. The waitlist was at least 200 deep IIRC (a friend's child was number 189).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:12:28 the principal has been preparing for years in case the school is expanded. We've talked about it a bunch of times in PTA board meetings. I personally assume that 4 classes per grade will be the norm, though I'm not sure how they'll squeeze more kids into the lunch schedule - the youngest kids already eat lunch at 10:20, which is probably the case at the most crowded elementaries in the county too.
Yep - added more trailers this year, and the entire 2nd grade is in trailers now -- 4 classes. Poor Mr. Godwin who got a break last year from his trailer is back out there, I guess!
Anonymous wrote:12:28 the principal has been preparing for years in case the school is expanded. We've talked about it a bunch of times in PTA board meetings. I personally assume that 4 classes per grade will be the norm, though I'm not sure how they'll squeeze more kids into the lunch schedule - the youngest kids already eat lunch at 10:20, which is probably the case at the most crowded elementaries in the county too.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:your chance of getting into ATS- slim- they admit somewhere between 25%-50% of kids that apply.
your chance of getting into Montessori- pretty good. There has not historically been a waitlist for montessori at the elementary level.
Your chance of getting into Immersion- pretty good if you are willing to be flexible. If you don't immediately get into your zoned immersion school, start pushing to be admitted to the other one, you probably will be (For the last several years Key has taken kids off the Claremont waiting list.) If the immersion waitlists continue to grow, APS is open to the idea of starting a 3rd elementary immersion school. There are a lot of educational benefits to immersion, particularly for native Spanish speakers.
Your chance of getting into Campbell- this is a wild card, previously there were very few zoned schools for which you could apply to Campbell. This is changing in a year and the entire county will be able to apply. I suspect that Campbell will become like ATS- slim chances.
I don't think that's true. Much slimmer chances. The year we applied, after siblings and VPI were accounted for, there were only like 20 spaces. The waitlist was at least 200 deep IIRC (a friend's child was number 189).
Anonymous wrote:Up until now, Key (Spanish) had a boundary, with the rest of the slots filled via lottery (most people applying for a spot). Now, it will all be by lottery.
Anonymous wrote:your chance of getting into ATS- slim- they admit somewhere between 25%-50% of kids that apply.
your chance of getting into Montessori- pretty good. There has not historically been a waitlist for montessori at the elementary level.
Your chance of getting into Immersion- pretty good if you are willing to be flexible. If you don't immediately get into your zoned immersion school, start pushing to be admitted to the other one, you probably will be (For the last several years Key has taken kids off the Claremont waiting list.) If the immersion waitlists continue to grow, APS is open to the idea of starting a 3rd elementary immersion school. There are a lot of educational benefits to immersion, particularly for native Spanish speakers.
Your chance of getting into Campbell- this is a wild card, previously there were very few zoned schools for which you could apply to Campbell. This is changing in a year and the entire county will be able to apply. I suspect that Campbell will become like ATS- slim chances.
Anonymous wrote:Also, important to know that while the lotteries are 'countywide', the slots are allocated by elementary zone based on (I think) number of kids in that zone. So, if there are 40 families in your zone applying for ATS, that's who you are up against for a spot, not the whole county. Some school zones have higher participation in the lotteries so it can be easier or harder to get in depending on where you live.