Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Somewhere between 15-21 % of children in the US are living in poverty.
I’m not certain if those numbers are stable or not, but it would appear the DC is over burdened.
You are not using the same figures. FARMS eligibility is not the same as "living in poverty."
There are many states poorer than Virginia, and many parts of Virginia with higher FARMS rates that FCPS and APS (which is higher than FCPS). But I'm guessing poor whites in Lee and Wise County don't push your button like poor Hispanics in Fairfax.
Stfu. I made zero mention of race.
The only thing the DC area is over-burdened with are the number of the nation’s wealthiest jurisdictions. You are a moron.
Try not to be an idiot.
You can have both extreme wealth and poverty. But please do go one about your outstanding school
Pyramid. Liberal hypocrisy never gets old for me.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Somewhere between 15-21 % of children in the US are living in poverty.
I’m not certain if those numbers are stable or not, but it would appear the DC is over burdened.
You are not using the same figures. FARMS eligibility is not the same as "living in poverty."
There are many states poorer than Virginia, and many parts of Virginia with higher FARMS rates that FCPS and APS (which is higher than FCPS). But I'm guessing poor whites in Lee and Wise County don't push your button like poor Hispanics in Fairfax.
Stfu. I made zero mention of race.
The only thing the DC area is over-burdened with are the number of the nation’s wealthiest jurisdictions. You are a moron.
Try not to be an idiot.
You can have both extreme wealth and poverty. But please do go one about your outstanding school
Pyramid. Liberal hypocrisy never gets old for me.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Somewhere between 15-21 % of children in the US are living in poverty.
I’m not certain if those numbers are stable or not, but it would appear the DC is over burdened.
You are not using the same figures. FARMS eligibility is not the same as "living in poverty."
There are many states poorer than Virginia, and many parts of Virginia with higher FARMS rates that FCPS and APS (which is higher than FCPS). But I'm guessing poor whites in Lee and Wise County don't push your button like poor Hispanics in Fairfax.
Stfu. I made zero mention of race.
The only thing the DC area is over-burdened with are the number of the nation’s wealthiest jurisdictions. You are a moron.
where they work for cash and appear very poor on paper.Anonymous wrote:Not at all surprised. Once Prince William pushed out illegal immigrants (and their children), they came to Fairfax and Montgomery
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Somewhere between 15-21 % of children in the US are living in poverty.
I’m not certain if those numbers are stable or not, but it would appear the DC is over burdened.
You are not using the same figures. FARMS eligibility is not the same as "living in poverty."
There are many states poorer than Virginia, and many parts of Virginia with higher FARMS rates that FCPS and APS (which is higher than FCPS). But I'm guessing poor whites in Lee and Wise County don't push your button like poor Hispanics in Fairfax.
Stfu. I made zero mention of race.
Anonymous wrote:Not at all surprised. Once Prince William pushed out illegal immigrants (and their children), they came to Fairfax and Montgomery.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Somewhere between 15-21 % of children in the US are living in poverty.
I’m not certain if those numbers are stable or not, but it would appear the DC is over burdened.
You are not using the same figures. FARMS eligibility is not the same as "living in poverty."
There are many states poorer than Virginia, and many parts of Virginia with higher FARMS rates that FCPS and APS (which is higher than FCPS). But I'm guessing poor whites in Lee and Wise County don't push your button like poor Hispanics in Fairfax.
Anonymous wrote:Somewhere between 15-21 % of children in the US are living in poverty.
I’m not certain if those numbers are stable or not, but it would appear the DC is over burdened.
Anonymous wrote:Somewhere between 15-21 % of children in the US are living in poverty.
I’m not certain if those numbers are stable or not, but it would appear the DC is over burdened.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes, we live in Herndon and are not in the bubble "away from it all" as the previous poster has described. Things are not the way they used to be. Low parental involvement it's always the same faces at functions, the lack of academic extra-curriculars that the wealthy middle schools have, and I'm constantly getting "attendance matters" emails from the high school.
I have been hearing this about public schools since I was in public schools in the 1970s.
Oops I bolted the wrong sentence.
DP - Well I grew up going to fcps in the 80’s, and it was generally understood that they were excellent schools across the board, with great faculty and engaged parents.
Anonymous wrote:[/quoteAnonymous wrote:I actually have a question about this. I was under the impression that once a school hits 40% , it becomes Title I. My kids' school is currently at 40%, maybe a bit higher, and this has not happened. Did FCPS change the requirements (I thought that % was set federally, but maybe not)?
FCPS doesn't have the power to changed that.
It was over 40% Obama administration, I wouldn't be surprised if this administration changed it to make it seems there less Title 1 schools.
Anonymous wrote:I actually have a question about this. I was under the impression that once a school hits 40% , it becomes Title I. My kids' school is currently at 40%, maybe a bit higher, and this has not happened. Did FCPS change the requirements (I thought that % was set federally, but maybe not)?