Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Right, EVERYONE should be doing that, not just the parents who support the moves. They didn't word it "help hold APS accountable", they said "hold APS accountable". Implying it wasn't their responsibility.
We will see what they actually do when it comes down to it. Will they be spiteful or constructive?
https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/arlington-makes-a-bad-move-on-elementary-schools/2020/02/09/e4812398-4a9d-11ea-8a1f-de1597be6cbc_story.html
I can’t access it. Who wrote it?
The McKinley PTA president. Her gotcha points are that they didn't follow the boundary procedure and that it hurts poor minority kids. Apparently she didn't see the inherent contradiction in this sentence: "One of these programs, Key Immersion, will be moved into a building where it will have to try to function at 152 percent capacity. Many Spanish-speaking families won’t be able to move with Key to its new location."
When I read it I couldn't believe she put those two things back to back. Um, you just solved the problem! Not everyone will move with the program, which solves the capacity issue. They can figure out future enrollment once they see how many Key Immersion families move.
I actually respected how she professionally handled the process and parents at McKinley - until now. This is lower than the trash that McKrazy and Data Dudes were spewing out.
Yes, the op-ed was slimy. Very misleading and such an obvious ploy for sympathy. She is exploiting those at-risk families.
IMO a good letter and well reasoned.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Right, EVERYONE should be doing that, not just the parents who support the moves. They didn't word it "help hold APS accountable", they said "hold APS accountable". Implying it wasn't their responsibility.
We will see what they actually do when it comes down to it. Will they be spiteful or constructive?
https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/arlington-makes-a-bad-move-on-elementary-schools/2020/02/09/e4812398-4a9d-11ea-8a1f-de1597be6cbc_story.html
I can’t access it. Who wrote it?
The McKinley PTA president. Her gotcha points are that they didn't follow the boundary procedure and that it hurts poor minority kids. Apparently she didn't see the inherent contradiction in this sentence: "One of these programs, Key Immersion, will be moved into a building where it will have to try to function at 152 percent capacity. Many Spanish-speaking families won’t be able to move with Key to its new location."
When I read it I couldn't believe she put those two things back to back. Um, you just solved the problem! Not everyone will move with the program, which solves the capacity issue. They can figure out future enrollment once they see how many Key Immersion families move.
I actually respected how she professionally handled the process and parents at McKinley - until now. This is lower than the trash that McKrazy and Data Dudes were spewing out.
Yes, the op-ed was slimy. Very misleading and such an obvious ploy for sympathy. She is exploiting those at-risk families.
IMO a good letter and well reasoned.
Anonymous wrote:
“Apparently Claremont is running a "50:50" model program with 28% Spanish speakers, so it shouldn't be too much of a problem to keep it.”
Where did you pull these numbers from? Looks like Claremont is 51.8% Hispanic according to the APS Stats.
Yes, not all Hispanics are Spanish speakers. But I highly doubt there is that much of a drop off.
https://www.apsva.us/wp-content/uploads/2019/12/Civil-Rights-Table-1-2019-12-13-web-002.pdf
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Right, EVERYONE should be doing that, not just the parents who support the moves. They didn't word it "help hold APS accountable", they said "hold APS accountable". Implying it wasn't their responsibility.
We will see what they actually do when it comes down to it. Will they be spiteful or constructive?
https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/arlington-makes-a-bad-move-on-elementary-schools/2020/02/09/e4812398-4a9d-11ea-8a1f-de1597be6cbc_story.html
I can’t access it. Who wrote it?
The McKinley PTA president. Her gotcha points are that they didn't follow the boundary procedure and that it hurts poor minority kids. Apparently she didn't see the inherent contradiction in this sentence: "One of these programs, Key Immersion, will be moved into a building where it will have to try to function at 152 percent capacity. Many Spanish-speaking families won’t be able to move with Key to its new location."
When I read it I couldn't believe she put those two things back to back. Um, you just solved the problem! Not everyone will move with the program, which solves the capacity issue. They can figure out future enrollment once they see how many Key Immersion families move.
I actually respected how she professionally handled the process and parents at McKinley - until now. This is lower than the trash that McKrazy and Data Dudes were spewing out.
Yes, the op-ed was slimy. Very misleading and such an obvious ploy for sympathy. She is exploiting those at-risk families.
IMO a good letter and well reasoned.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Right, EVERYONE should be doing that, not just the parents who support the moves. They didn't word it "help hold APS accountable", they said "hold APS accountable". Implying it wasn't their responsibility.
We will see what they actually do when it comes down to it. Will they be spiteful or constructive?
https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/arlington-makes-a-bad-move-on-elementary-schools/2020/02/09/e4812398-4a9d-11ea-8a1f-de1597be6cbc_story.html
I can’t access it. Who wrote it?
The McKinley PTA president. Her gotcha points are that they didn't follow the boundary procedure and that it hurts poor minority kids. Apparently she didn't see the inherent contradiction in this sentence: "One of these programs, Key Immersion, will be moved into a building where it will have to try to function at 152 percent capacity. Many Spanish-speaking families won’t be able to move with Key to its new location."
When I read it I couldn't believe she put those two things back to back. Um, you just solved the problem! Not everyone will move with the program, which solves the capacity issue. They can figure out future enrollment once they see how many Key Immersion families move.
I actually respected how she professionally handled the process and parents at McKinley - until now. This is lower than the trash that McKrazy and Data Dudes were spewing out.
Yes, the op-ed was slimy. Very misleading and such an obvious ploy for sympathy. She is exploiting those at-risk families.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Right, EVERYONE should be doing that, not just the parents who support the moves. They didn't word it "help hold APS accountable", they said "hold APS accountable". Implying it wasn't their responsibility.
We will see what they actually do when it comes down to it. Will they be spiteful or constructive?
https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/arlington-makes-a-bad-move-on-elementary-schools/2020/02/09/e4812398-4a9d-11ea-8a1f-de1597be6cbc_story.html
I can’t access it. Who wrote it?
The McKinley PTA president. Her gotcha points are that they didn't follow the boundary procedure and that it hurts poor minority kids. Apparently she didn't see the inherent contradiction in this sentence: "One of these programs, Key Immersion, will be moved into a building where it will have to try to function at 152 percent capacity. Many Spanish-speaking families won’t be able to move with Key to its new location."
When I read it I couldn't believe she put those two things back to back. Um, you just solved the problem! Not everyone will move with the program, which solves the capacity issue. They can figure out future enrollment once they see how many Key Immersion families move.
I actually respected how she professionally handled the process and parents at McKinley - until now. This is lower than the trash that McKrazy and Data Dudes were spewing out.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Key did this all wrong. They should have accepted that they were moving early on and spent their efforts advocating for a move to a building that meets their needs.
They really aren't in a bad position right now all things considered. They got THE central location in the county and there is already a feasibility study underway for an addition. All they have to do is advocate hard for the addition to be done as quickly as possible (preferably without being jerks) and they are golden.
If 40% of the current Key isn't going to move, why do they need an addition?
But seriously, if they can't get more Spanish speaking applicants, than they probably don't need an addition. I think they only got 35 Spanish speaking applicants last year, it will be interesting to see how many they get this year. If the number doesn't go up, than they need to reduce the number of Kindergarten classrooms.
If there is room for more seats there we should build them. (Since we need seats and all)
+1. Even without more students enrolling in the immersion program, those extra seats can be used for Pre-K, Special Ed, etc.
Anonymous wrote:Some Key families—rich or not rich- are there to escape from their neighborhood school.
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Key did this all wrong. They should have accepted that they were moving early on and spent their efforts advocating for a move to a building that meets their needs.
They really aren't in a bad position right now all things considered. They got THE central location in the county and there is already a feasibility study underway for an addition. All they have to do is advocate hard for the addition to be done as quickly as possible (preferably without being jerks) and they are golden.
If 40% of the current Key isn't going to move, why do they need an addition?
But seriously, if they can't get more Spanish speaking applicants, than they probably don't need an addition. I think they only got 35 Spanish speaking applicants last year, it will be interesting to see how many they get this year. If the number doesn't go up, than they need to reduce the number of Kindergarten classrooms.
If there is room for more seats there we should build them. (Since we need seats and all)
They can change to a different model (not 50/50) if the current one isn’t working.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Right, EVERYONE should be doing that, not just the parents who support the moves. They didn't word it "help hold APS accountable", they said "hold APS accountable". Implying it wasn't their responsibility.
We will see what they actually do when it comes down to it. Will they be spiteful or constructive?
https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/arlington-makes-a-bad-move-on-elementary-schools/2020/02/09/e4812398-4a9d-11ea-8a1f-de1597be6cbc_story.html
I can’t access it. Who wrote it?
The McKinley PTA president. Her gotcha points are that they didn't follow the boundary procedure and that it hurts poor minority kids. Apparently she didn't see the inherent contradiction in this sentence: "One of these programs, Key Immersion, will be moved into a building where it will have to try to function at 152 percent capacity. Many Spanish-speaking families won’t be able to move with Key to its new location."
When I read it I couldn't believe she put those two things back to back. Um, you just solved the problem! Not everyone will move with the program, which solves the capacity issue. They can figure out future enrollment once they see how many Key Immersion families move.
I actually respected how she professionally handled the process and parents at McKinley - until now. This is lower than the trash that McKrazy and Data Dudes were spewing out.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Right, EVERYONE should be doing that, not just the parents who support the moves. They didn't word it "help hold APS accountable", they said "hold APS accountable". Implying it wasn't their responsibility.
We will see what they actually do when it comes down to it. Will they be spiteful or constructive?
https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/arlington-makes-a-bad-move-on-elementary-schools/2020/02/09/e4812398-4a9d-11ea-8a1f-de1597be6cbc_story.html
I can’t access it. Who wrote it?
The McKinley PTA president. Her gotcha points are that they didn't follow the boundary procedure and that it hurts poor minority kids. Apparently she didn't see the inherent contradiction in this sentence: "One of these programs, Key Immersion, will be moved into a building where it will have to try to function at 152 percent capacity. Many Spanish-speaking families won’t be able to move with Key to its new location."
When I read it I couldn't believe she put those two things back to back. Um, you just solved the problem! Not everyone will move with the program, which solves the capacity issue. They can figure out future enrollment once they see how many Key Immersion families move.
I actually respected how she professionally handled the process and parents at McKinley - until now. This is lower than the trash that McKrazy and Data Dudes were spewing out.
Eh...I felt very silenced as a pro-move McKinley parent and I know others felt exactly the same. Pretty much out of the gate, the emails were - here's what we think, here's your talking points, here's your chance to go tell the Board how anti-move you are. No balance AT ALL. Very uncomfortable. After a few of those emails, who is going to show up at a PTA meeting or a SB meeting and openly disagree? A total silencing effect.
I'm sure she'd say the people in the room at a first PTA meeting to discuss this issue all agreed with her. See: self-selection. You are representing a lot more people than the people who show up to one of your insular, clubby PTA meetings. Or you're supposed to at least.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Right, EVERYONE should be doing that, not just the parents who support the moves. They didn't word it "help hold APS accountable", they said "hold APS accountable". Implying it wasn't their responsibility.
We will see what they actually do when it comes down to it. Will they be spiteful or constructive?
https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/arlington-makes-a-bad-move-on-elementary-schools/2020/02/09/e4812398-4a9d-11ea-8a1f-de1597be6cbc_story.html
I can’t access it. Who wrote it?
The McKinley PTA president. Her gotcha points are that they didn't follow the boundary procedure and that it hurts poor minority kids. Apparently she didn't see the inherent contradiction in this sentence: "One of these programs, Key Immersion, will be moved into a building where it will have to try to function at 152 percent capacity. Many Spanish-speaking families won’t be able to move with Key to its new location."
When I read it I couldn't believe she put those two things back to back. Um, you just solved the problem! Not everyone will move with the program, which solves the capacity issue. They can figure out future enrollment once they see how many Key Immersion families move.
I actually respected how she professionally handled the process and parents at McKinley - until now. This is lower than the trash that McKrazy and Data Dudes were spewing out.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Right, EVERYONE should be doing that, not just the parents who support the moves. They didn't word it "help hold APS accountable", they said "hold APS accountable". Implying it wasn't their responsibility.
We will see what they actually do when it comes down to it. Will they be spiteful or constructive?
https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/arlington-makes-a-bad-move-on-elementary-schools/2020/02/09/e4812398-4a9d-11ea-8a1f-de1597be6cbc_story.html
I can’t access it. Who wrote it?
The McKinley PTA president. Her gotcha points are that they didn't follow the boundary procedure and that it hurts poor minority kids. Apparently she didn't see the inherent contradiction in this sentence: "One of these programs, Key Immersion, will be moved into a building where it will have to try to function at 152 percent capacity. Many Spanish-speaking families won’t be able to move with Key to its new location."
When I read it I couldn't believe she put those two things back to back. Um, you just solved the problem! Not everyone will move with the program, which solves the capacity issue. They can figure out future enrollment once they see how many Key Immersion families move.
I actually respected how she professionally handled the process and parents at McKinley - until now. This is lower than the trash that McKrazy and Data Dudes were spewing out.
I don't understand the statement that the boundary-only approach would have involved fewer buses and re-assigning fewer students. I assume she's probably counting all the ATS and Key kids moving en masse? Otherwise this statement makes no sense. And there is no way that community driven boundary option involved less busing. Just no way.