Anonymous wrote:The worries about behavior are overblown a bit. The reality is that many of the kids in the area don’t have a lot opportunities for enrichment. If anything they love school more than being in a boring house or apartment. When I taught at Parkland I heard this all the time from students. That said, many students are way into drama but they basically just feed off eachother. They leave the smart (boring to them) kids alone and basically completely ignore the out of consortium students. They biggest complaint from students is when they have to work in a group on a project or presentation. But you will hear that complaint from students at any middle school in the county for a variety of reasons.
Anonymous wrote:I toured it as my DC is highly interested in tech and I suspect that will be his future. From my hour+ there, I agree with the PP. The focused classes are great, but there are so many hours in the rest of the day that are driven by the rest of the population -- the lunchroom seemed tough, and there are so many classes that are "mixed" that it's not really a 'magnet' school in any true sense. I'd tour it yourself, but probably recommend avoiding
Anonymous wrote:I am bumping this thread. My son just got an invitation to Argyle. Any more recent comments about the school? Still troublesome?
Anonymous wrote:I am bumping this thread. My son just got an invitation to Argyle. Any more recent comments about the school? Still troublesome?
Anonymous wrote:We have friends who have sent children to Argyle for the magnet. The magnet classes are great. The student population, however, is not great. Getting the wrong teacher for a class can mean that your child is in a group that is completely out of control. Phones out, videos being watched, even chairs being thrown instead of learning. Kids are physically harmed and threatened with worse if they report it in the locker room after gym class (where there is no adult supervision). This is not an exaggeration.
Anonymous wrote:We have friends who have sent children to Argyle for the magnet. The magnet classes are great. The student population, however, is not great. Getting the wrong teacher for a class can mean that your child is in a group that is completely out of control. Phones out, videos being watched, even chairs being thrown instead of learning. Kids are physically harmed and threatened with worse if they report it in the locker room after gym class (where there is no adult supervision). This is not an exaggeration.
Anonymous wrote:I am bumping this thread. My son just got an invitation to Argyle. Any more recent comments about the school? Still troublesome?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I toured it as my DC is highly interested in tech and I suspect that will be his future. From my hour+ there, I agree with the PP. The focused classes are great, but there are so many hours in the rest of the day that are driven by the rest of the population -- the lunchroom seemed tough, and there are so many classes that are "mixed" that it's not really a 'magnet' school in any true sense. I'd tour it yourself, but probably recommend avoiding
All the classes are mixed. It’s a whole school program. There no magnet kids and non magnet kids. They are all in the program.
Which means that it is not a magnet program, just called one!
It is a whole school magnet. The digital design classes are magnet level classes. How does this affect you? Does a school only count as magnet if it brings in kids from outside the neighborhood and segregates them from the normies?
Do all the kids have to take the digital design magnet level classes or only those that want to? I think the question with magnets is the availability of special electives and being in class with motivated, engaged students with limited disruptiveness. That is presumably more of a problem in “mixed” classes and/or classes where not everyone shares a strong interest in the “magnet” subject.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I toured it as my DC is highly interested in tech and I suspect that will be his future. From my hour+ there, I agree with the PP. The focused classes are great, but there are so many hours in the rest of the day that are driven by the rest of the population -- the lunchroom seemed tough, and there are so many classes that are "mixed" that it's not really a 'magnet' school in any true sense. I'd tour it yourself, but probably recommend avoiding
All the classes are mixed. It’s a whole school program. There no magnet kids and non magnet kids. They are all in the program.
Which means that it is not a magnet program, just called one!
It is a whole school magnet. The digital design classes are magnet level classes. How does this affect you? Does a school only count as magnet if it brings in kids from outside the neighborhood and segregates them from the normies?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I toured it as my DC is highly interested in tech and I suspect that will be his future. From my hour+ there, I agree with the PP. The focused classes are great, but there are so many hours in the rest of the day that are driven by the rest of the population -- the lunchroom seemed tough, and there are so many classes that are "mixed" that it's not really a 'magnet' school in any true sense. I'd tour it yourself, but probably recommend avoiding
All the classes are mixed. It’s a whole school program. There no magnet kids and non magnet kids. They are all in the program.
Which means that it is not a magnet program, just called one!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I toured it as my DC is highly interested in tech and I suspect that will be his future. From my hour+ there, I agree with the PP. The focused classes are great, but there are so many hours in the rest of the day that are driven by the rest of the population -- the lunchroom seemed tough, and there are so many classes that are "mixed" that it's not really a 'magnet' school in any true sense. I'd tour it yourself, but probably recommend avoiding
All the classes are mixed. It’s a whole school program. There no magnet kids and non magnet kids. They are all in the program.