Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If they are trying to kill HB, they've stumbled upon a good way to do it. Implementing a sibling preference there means that far fewer families will have access to the program, significantly reducing HB's constituency.
I just read on AEM that they'll just add extra seats to H-B for siblings. Doesn't this mean that their program can - and will - get bigger? So shouldn't they plan to build more seats at the new H-B campus?
I saw that, too. They aren't going to get bigger, though. The HB folks will fight it and siblings will continue to get in at a rate that defies statistics.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If they are trying to kill HB, they've stumbled upon a good way to do it. Implementing a sibling preference there means that far fewer families will have access to the program, significantly reducing HB's constituency.
I just read on AEM that they'll just add extra seats to H-B for siblings. Doesn't this mean that their program can - and will - get bigger? So shouldn't they plan to build more seats at the new H-B campus?
Anonymous wrote:If they are trying to kill HB, they've stumbled upon a good way to do it. Implementing a sibling preference there means that far fewer families will have access to the program, significantly reducing HB's constituency.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If there is so much demand and it can't be scaled, how about HB2 - in the Ed Center?
This is really the question I have. If HB is popular, a lot of kids are being denied each year, why doesn't the County create a second program, styled on this success?
Because they don't want to. It wouldn't be an elite program if more kids could access it.
It's not an "elite" program now... Might be coveted, but it's not "elite"
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If there is so much demand and it can't be scaled, how about HB2 - in the Ed Center?
This is really the question I have. If HB is popular, a lot of kids are being denied each year, why doesn't the County create a second program, styled on this success?
Because they don't want to. It wouldn't be an elite program if more kids could access it.
Anonymous wrote:There is no "sibling preference" at HB and no discussion of creating one. Siblings of current or past students do not get any preferential treatment in the lottery. Period, full stop.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If there is so much demand and it can't be scaled, how about HB2 - in the Ed Center?
This is really the question I have. If HB is popular, a lot of kids are being denied each year, why doesn't the County create a second program, styled on this success?
Seriously. Or at the career center. I'm confused as to why they're not planning to expand an educational focus that parents have proven they want, rather than try to build a program without established demand. They could even move some of the teachers/kids from the existing H-B to H-B2 to keep it from feeling like a lesser, lamer version of H-B.
(Note - I'm really opposed to building more seats on the same campus as W-L. But at least a self-contained program like an HB would help keep W-L feeling small-ish.)
Anonymous wrote:There is no "sibling preference" at HB and no discussion of creating one. Siblings of current or past students do not get any preferential treatment in the lottery. Period, full stop.
Anonymous wrote:There is no "sibling preference" at HB and no discussion of creating one. Siblings of current or past students do not get any preferential treatment in the lottery. Period, full stop.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If there is so much demand and it can't be scaled, how about HB2 - in the Ed Center?
This is really the question I have. If HB is popular, a lot of kids are being denied each year, why doesn't the County create a second program, styled on this success?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If there is so much demand and it can't be scaled, how about HB2 - in the Ed Center?
This is really the question I have. If HB is popular, a lot of kids are being denied each year, why doesn't the County create a second program, styled on this success?