Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’ve got a bright, engaged student who will enter HS next year and I worry about these things. There is cohort placement in some classes, but not others. I like IB, but fear the size projections for WL. As a parent and staff member, I’ve seen a lot of problems with decisions meant to even the playing field and how it negatively impacted higher level students.
Is there anyway to level playing field but still differentiate?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:W-L does not have 4000 students. That’s ridiculous. It has about 2000. We have been very pleased with the level of instruction there. My son is in 10th grade.
But W-L will and must grow. They are building an addition now and then “tweaking” boundaries again. They have to move more kids to where they built seats. However, since they postponed the Career Center project indefinitely, and W-L can’t take all the kids they aren’t building seats for, Yorktown and Wakefield will get trailers and also be overcrowded.
Wait they postponed Career Center??
Anonymous wrote:I am a fan of differentiation and I get why it would be a problem not to offer it, my understanding is that there are three math tracks in middle school (or at least in sixth grade). Also my sixth grader is very bright and is plenty challenged in her language arts and humanities classes. So I don’t know, it might be a teacher thing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP I don’t know if it is helpful but have you seen the list of where APS students applied to college and where they were accepted? Any lack of academic rigor doesn’t seem to have stopped them from getting into good schools, as a whole.
I know there is value in private school and I wouldn’t hesitate to make the financial sacrifice to go private if I thought they needed it, but right now APS is good enough for my kids.
Oops here is the link.
https://www.arlingtonmagazine.com/where-arlingtons-class-of-2020-applied-to-college-and-got-in/
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
OP here. Sorry it was 3000, not 4000. Just huge. And they were thinking of converting buck property to class space, and have all those crazy DL or night shifts, and getting spots in extracurriculars becomes a blood spot.
I have a senior at W-L now. He's had a good experience academically and made good friends but the extracurriculars have been an issue. It's not that they're competitive (at least what interested him). They tend to welcome all who want to participate. But, as a result, he told me he feels like it really doesn't matter if he participates in anything since there are 10 other kids who can do the same thing. Yes, he does some community service and did theater crew but if he didn't show up it would not in anyway be felt. He got a lot more out of ECs outside of school where he actually felt needed.
Less of an issue for a kid really dedicated to something like a music group or a sport. My 11th grade DD is in marching band and definitely has a strong community there.
Anonymous wrote:OP I don’t know if it is helpful but have you seen the list of where APS students applied to college and where they were accepted? Any lack of academic rigor doesn’t seem to have stopped them from getting into good schools, as a whole.
I know there is value in private school and I wouldn’t hesitate to make the financial sacrifice to go private if I thought they needed it, but right now APS is good enough for my kids.
Anonymous wrote:OP I don’t know if it is helpful but have you seen the list of where APS students applied to college and where they were accepted? Any lack of academic rigor doesn’t seem to have stopped them from getting into good schools, as a whole.
I know there is value in private school and I wouldn’t hesitate to make the financial sacrifice to go private if I thought they needed it, but right now APS is good enough for my kids.
Anonymous wrote:
OP here. Sorry it was 3000, not 4000. Just huge. And they were thinking of converting buck property to class space, and have all those crazy DL or night shifts, and getting spots in extracurriculars becomes a blood spot.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:W-L does not have 4000 students. That’s ridiculous. It has about 2000. We have been very pleased with the level of instruction there. My son is in 10th grade.
But W-L will and must grow. They are building an addition now and then “tweaking” boundaries again. They have to move more kids to where they built seats. However, since they postponed the Career Center project indefinitely, and W-L can’t take all the kids they aren’t building seats for, Yorktown and Wakefield will get trailers and also be overcrowded.
Anonymous wrote:W-L does not have 4000 students. That’s ridiculous. It has about 2000. We have been very pleased with the level of instruction there. My son is in 10th grade.
Anonymous wrote:I’ve got a bright, engaged student who will enter HS next year and I worry about these things. There is cohort placement in some classes, but not others. I like IB, but fear the size projections for WL. As a parent and staff member, I’ve seen a lot of problems with decisions meant to even the playing field and how it negatively impacted higher level students.