Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A lot of folks seem to think the Career Center site is a shoe-in for a fourth comprehensive high school. But a lot of people think Kenmore makes more sense, regardless of the current traffic complaint. So, given the current process to add seats to the Career Center site and the very limited budget and phased approach to increasing capacity there, why should that be the location for a fourth comprehensive high school? Considering the various programs and the elementary school currently there, and the acreage being less than a third of the acreage at Kenmore, how/why would this make sense? How/why would this be the most efficient and feasible solution to high school capacity in the timeframe needed?
This is a case where the School Board is right. We do not need to waste 130+ million on a highschool that will be a ghost town one day just like Arlington schools were in the 80s? The SB has made the right decisions with expanding W&L and adding Arlington Tech. These are the innovative ways that will not waste money on a a comprehensive high school we do not need.
And when will the schools be a ghost town? When traffic magically improves and people decide living in Arlington isn’t worth the money? When Trump drains the swamp?
No one has ever given me anything but a laughable explanation on how Arlington Tech is going to pull enough kids out of the high schools to make any difference.
Arlington Tech is unlikely to ever shed the vocational school tag. This isn’t necessarily fair given what they are trying to do with the program and I love vocational schools. But perceptions will persist and it won’t really appeal to the Type A demographic that dominates Arlington.
Unless they pump a ton of money into science labs (or things like that) and somehow make it “elite,” the number of kids zoned to Yorktown who go there will be painfully low. It won’t make a dent into overcrowding. And, because of that, the money put into it will be a waste.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A lot of folks seem to think the Career Center site is a shoe-in for a fourth comprehensive high school. But a lot of people think Kenmore makes more sense, regardless of the current traffic complaint. So, given the current process to add seats to the Career Center site and the very limited budget and phased approach to increasing capacity there, why should that be the location for a fourth comprehensive high school? Considering the various programs and the elementary school currently there, and the acreage being less than a third of the acreage at Kenmore, how/why would this make sense? How/why would this be the most efficient and feasible solution to high school capacity in the timeframe needed?
This is a case where the School Board is right. We do not need to waste 130+ million on a highschool that will be a ghost town one day just like Arlington schools were in the 80s? The SB has made the right decisions with expanding W&L and adding Arlington Tech. These are the innovative ways that will not waste money on a a comprehensive high school we do not need.
It was this attitude - that obviously needed projects in APS would be a waste of money - that convinced us to move to Fairfax. I know that’s what posters like PP are counting on, but it still feels good to have escaped the indifference to families and know our kids won’t be stuck in some annex to an already overcrowded high school.
Anonymous wrote:But there's no room for sports or other amenities at the Career Center. That's what I don't understand.
Anonymous wrote:A lot of folks seem to think the Career Center site is a shoe-in for a fourth comprehensive high school. But a lot of people think Kenmore makes more sense, regardless of the current traffic complaint. So, given the current process to add seats to the Career Center site and the very limited budget and phased approach to increasing capacity there, why should that be the location for a fourth comprehensive high school? Considering the various programs and the elementary school currently there, and the acreage being less than a third of the acreage at Kenmore, how/why would this make sense? How/why would this be the most efficient and feasible solution to high school capacity in the timeframe needed?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:But won't the Career Center remain an option school, not a neighborhood school? Is the school board's plan to require the Career Center, which I thought was being billed as a hands-on learning almost vo-tech type school with no arts or sports options on site as a neighborhood school for local residents?
That's what the plan was. Now the immediate neighborhood sees an opportunity to grab the school for themselves to create a wealthier HS, for themselves.
This seems pretty selfish of the neighborhood.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:But won't the Career Center remain an option school, not a neighborhood school? Is the school board's plan to require the Career Center, which I thought was being billed as a hands-on learning almost vo-tech type school with no arts or sports options on site as a neighborhood school for local residents?
That's what the plan was. Now the immediate neighborhood sees an opportunity to grab the school for themselves to create a wealthier HS, for themselves.
Anonymous wrote:But won't the Career Center remain an option school, not a neighborhood school? Is the school board's plan to require the Career Center, which I thought was being billed as a hands-on learning almost vo-tech type school with no arts or sports options on site as a neighborhood school for local residents?
Anonymous wrote:What ultimately stopped me from lobbying for a 4th comprehensive was its location in the south and the fact that it would ultimately be made disproportionately of FARMs students. W-L is a great site for bringing North and South together, and the Career Center is more centrally located in the same way.
But I agree that Kenmore has superior land available to it and the whole thing makes me angry. But ... once a student population is around 45% FARMs, it's a bit doomed in terms of achievement, and that's the way a Kenmore High seemed, to me, likely to be zoned under this School Board's way of doing things.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A lot of folks seem to think the Career Center site is a shoe-in for a fourth comprehensive high school. But a lot of people think Kenmore makes more sense, regardless of the current traffic complaint. So, given the current process to add seats to the Career Center site and the very limited budget and phased approach to increasing capacity there, why should that be the location for a fourth comprehensive high school? Considering the various programs and the elementary school currently there, and the acreage being less than a third of the acreage at Kenmore, how/why would this make sense? How/why would this be the most efficient and feasible solution to high school capacity in the timeframe needed?
This is a case where the School Board is right. We do not need to waste 130+ million on a highschool that will be a ghost town one day just like Arlington schools were in the 80s? The SB has made the right decisions with expanding W&L and adding Arlington Tech. These are the innovative ways that will not waste money on a a comprehensive high school we do not need.
It was this attitude - that obviously needed projects in APS would be a waste of money - that convinced us to move to Fairfax. I know that’s what posters like PP are counting on, but it still feels good to have escaped the indifference to families and know our kids won’t be stuck in some annex to an already overcrowded high school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What ultimately stopped me from lobbying for a 4th comprehensive was its location in the south and the fact that it would ultimately be made disproportionately of FARMs students. W-L is a great site for bringing North and South together, and the Career Center is more centrally located in the same way.
But I agree that Kenmore has superior land available to it and the whole thing makes me angry. But ... once a student population is around 45% FARMs, it's a bit doomed in terms of achievement, and that's the way a Kenmore High seemed, to me, likely to be zoned under this School Board's way of doing things.
I believe the FRL proportions would be worse with the school at the Career Center. Kenmore could take a boundary extending northward and eastward without capturing all of the most densely low-income neighborhoods on the west end of Columbia Pike (even with this SB - and I tend to not have any hope or optimism with this board on anything). South of the Pike, or much of it, could stay at Wakefield along with the affluence of the Oakridge district, Shirlington, Douglas Park.
But the Career Center will take the wealthy Oakridge area, and the parts of the Pike that have caused Patrick henry to lose its Title I status (it is close to 30% FRL now rather than over 40%). Taking the wealthiest parts of south Arlington, along with some strong MC neighborhoods north of 50, would decimate Wakefield.
There is more flexibility with boundaries with a fourth school located at Kenmore than there is with two schools located in the center of the County. (By that, I also mean flexibility in shifting the boundaries to all four schools as needed, because you can shift areas around clockwise). One has to wonder if that's part of the real reason for so much pushback about the Kenmore site......Glencarlyn, north Arlington Forest......they don't want to lose their "walkability" to W-L. Well, they can't give the same "lack of walkability" argument to a school in their backyard at Kenmore.
Anonymous wrote:What ultimately stopped me from lobbying for a 4th comprehensive was its location in the south and the fact that it would ultimately be made disproportionately of FARMs students. W-L is a great site for bringing North and South together, and the Career Center is more centrally located in the same way.
But I agree that Kenmore has superior land available to it and the whole thing makes me angry. But ... once a student population is around 45% FARMs, it's a bit doomed in terms of achievement, and that's the way a Kenmore High seemed, to me, likely to be zoned under this School Board's way of doing things.