Anonymous wrote:If there is so much demand and it can't be scaled, how about HB2 - in the Ed Center?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It looks like she's getting her way. The new proposal gives sibling preference at ALL levels. So, if your school gets 4 HB slots and enough kids have older siblings in the school already, tough luck. People with only children need not apply.
What new proposal? Where can I find it?
http://www.boarddocs.com/vsba/arlington/Board.nsf/files/AMEN8S5EB8B6/$file/School%20Board%20Revisions%20to%20SB%20Policy%2025-2%202%20-%20markup.pdf
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It looks like she's getting her way. The new proposal gives sibling preference at ALL levels. So, if your school gets 4 HB slots and enough kids have older siblings in the school already, tough luck. People with only children need not apply.
What new proposal? Where can I find it?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It looks like she's getting her way. The new proposal gives sibling preference at ALL levels. So, if your school gets 4 HB slots and enough kids have older siblings in the school already, tough luck. People with only children need not apply.
What new proposal? Where can I find it?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It looks like she's getting her way. The new proposal gives sibling preference at ALL levels. So, if your school gets 4 HB slots and enough kids have older siblings in the school already, tough luck. People with only children need not apply.
So what happens if you have 4 slots and there are more than 4 kids with a sibling preference? Do they all get in? Again we get back to the issue that if they can get bigger for siblings then they should just be bigger.
Anonymous wrote:It looks like she's getting her way. The new proposal gives sibling preference at ALL levels. So, if your school gets 4 HB slots and enough kids have older siblings in the school already, tough luck. People with only children need not apply.
Anonymous wrote:It looks like she's getting her way. The new proposal gives sibling preference at ALL levels. So, if your school gets 4 HB slots and enough kids have older siblings in the school already, tough luck. People with only children need not apply.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have strongly supported HB thus far, even though my 6th grader did not get in. I think that it is a huge asset to Arlington, and I support it staying the size that it is rather than watering it down by a large expansion. If the school board tries to pull a sibling preference policy into play, however, you better believe there will be hell to pay and you will see people like me, who otherwise would have gone to bat for HB, leading the way.
Want sibling preference? Fine. But the program needs to be expanded to accommodate them in addition to the full complement of kids who get in through the existing lottery system. You can't have your cake and eat it too.
If the program can expand that much without ruining it, then why do only certain families get access to those spots? It totally prejudices against families with only children, or whose oldest has yet to get in, or is new to the school system, or any other of a host of reasons that they don't already have kids at the school. If HB can absorb more kids, then it should absorb more kids from across the system with no special set asides. HB itself is already a special set aside.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have strongly supported HB thus far, even though my 6th grader did not get in. I think that it is a huge asset to Arlington, and I support it staying the size that it is rather than watering it down by a large expansion. If the school board tries to pull a sibling preference policy into play, however, you better believe there will be hell to pay and you will see people like me, who otherwise would have gone to bat for HB, leading the way.
Want sibling preference? Fine. But the program needs to be expanded to accommodate them in addition to the full complement of kids who get in through the existing lottery system. You can't have your cake and eat it too.
If the program can expand that much without ruining it, then why do only certain families get access to those spots? It totally prejudices against families with only children, or whose oldest has yet to get in, or is new to the school system, or any other of a host of reasons that they don't already have kids at the school. If HB can absorb more kids, then it should absorb more kids from across the system with no special set asides. HB itself is already a special set aside.
Anonymous wrote:I have strongly supported HB thus far, even though my 6th grader did not get in. I think that it is a huge asset to Arlington, and I support it staying the size that it is rather than watering it down by a large expansion. If the school board tries to pull a sibling preference policy into play, however, you better believe there will be hell to pay and you will see people like me, who otherwise would have gone to bat for HB, leading the way.
Want sibling preference? Fine. But the program needs to be expanded to accommodate them in addition to the full complement of kids who get in through the existing lottery system. You can't have your cake and eat it too.