Anonymous wrote:The school board didn’t run on this. Mrs Reid wasn’t hired for this either.
They put the framework in place for future school board members and the next superintendent to run and be hired to make (or not make) changes.
End this farce.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't know the western part of the county as well as the southeastern, but when South County opened the ensuing boundary changes left Lee (Lewis) with a high-poverty population. Is there a risk that this could happen to a school like Westfield?
I moved here right after South County opened, and didn’t have kids in FCPS yet. But I always thought SC took almost all of its students from Hayfield, which was bursting at the seams at the time? I can’t imagine commuting to Lewis from Lorton. What elementary(ies?) were zoned to Lee at the time that ended up at SC, or were these secondary moves to put kids into Hayfield when they lost students to SC?
Newington Forest previously split between Lee and Hayfield. When South County opened all of Newington Forest went to South County. In the same boundary study, Hunt Valley, which had split between West Springfield and Lee, was all sent to West Springfield.
I knew that about the Hunt Valley split feeder but didn’t realize some of Newington Forest was at Lee as well. That’s a brutal drive.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't know the western part of the county as well as the southeastern, but when South County opened the ensuing boundary changes left Lee (Lewis) with a high-poverty population. Is there a risk that this could happen to a school like Westfield?
Yeah, Lewis is definitely not a school you want your child to attend at present. Poor quality education and dangerous as well.
This is false information. Lewis provides an excellent education, and I sincerely don't know what you're referring to with it being dangerous.
The big challenge with Lewis is that it's so small, so it's hard to support extracurricular activities.
DP, only for activists in Fairfax County is a 1,500+ school deemed “so small”. Over under on the percentage of public high schools in the country less than 1,500 students? I’d guess 80 or 90%.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't know the western part of the county as well as the southeastern, but when South County opened the ensuing boundary changes left Lee (Lewis) with a high-poverty population. Is there a risk that this could happen to a school like Westfield?
I moved here right after South County opened, and didn’t have kids in FCPS yet. But I always thought SC took almost all of its students from Hayfield, which was bursting at the seams at the time? I can’t imagine commuting to Lewis from Lorton. What elementary(ies?) were zoned to Lee at the time that ended up at SC, or were these secondary moves to put kids into Hayfield when they lost students to SC?
Newington Forest previously split between Lee and Hayfield. When South County opened all of Newington Forest went to South County. In the same boundary study, Hunt Valley, which had split between West Springfield and Lee, was all sent to West Springfield.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't know the western part of the county as well as the southeastern, but when South County opened the ensuing boundary changes left Lee (Lewis) with a high-poverty population. Is there a risk that this could happen to a school like Westfield?
Yeah, Lewis is definitely not a school you want your child to attend at present. Poor quality education and dangerous as well.
This is false information. Lewis provides an excellent education, and I sincerely don't know what you're referring to with it being dangerous.
The big challenge with Lewis is that it's so small, so it's hard to support extracurricular activities.
DP, only for activists in Fairfax County is a 1,500+ school deemed “so small”. Over under on the percentage of public high schools in the country less than 1,500 students? I’d guess 80 or 90%.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't know the western part of the county as well as the southeastern, but when South County opened the ensuing boundary changes left Lee (Lewis) with a high-poverty population. Is there a risk that this could happen to a school like Westfield?
Yeah, Lewis is definitely not a school you want your child to attend at present. Poor quality education and dangerous as well.
This is false information. Lewis provides an excellent education, and I sincerely don't know what you're referring to with it being dangerous.
The big challenge with Lewis is that it's so small, so it's hard to support extracurricular activities.
DP, only for activists in Fairfax County is a 1,500+ school deemed “so small”. Over under on the percentage of public high schools in the country less than 1,500 students? I’d guess 80 or 90%.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't know the western part of the county as well as the southeastern, but when South County opened the ensuing boundary changes left Lee (Lewis) with a high-poverty population. Is there a risk that this could happen to a school like Westfield?
Yeah, Lewis is definitely not a school you want your child to attend at present. Poor quality education and dangerous as well.
This is false information. Lewis provides an excellent education, and I sincerely don't know what you're referring to with it being dangerous.
The big challenge with Lewis is that it's so small, so it's hard to support extracurricular activities.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't know the western part of the county as well as the southeastern, but when South County opened the ensuing boundary changes left Lee (Lewis) with a high-poverty population. Is there a risk that this could happen to a school like Westfield?
I moved here right after South County opened, and didn’t have kids in FCPS yet. But I always thought SC took almost all of its students from Hayfield, which was bursting at the seams at the time? I can’t imagine commuting to Lewis from Lorton. What elementary(ies?) were zoned to Lee at the time that ended up at SC, or were these secondary moves to put kids into Hayfield when they lost students to SC?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't know the western part of the county as well as the southeastern, but when South County opened the ensuing boundary changes left Lee (Lewis) with a high-poverty population. Is there a risk that this could happen to a school like Westfield?
Yeah, Lewis is definitely not a school you want your child to attend at present. Poor quality education and dangerous as well.
Anonymous wrote:I don't know the western part of the county as well as the southeastern, but when South County opened the ensuing boundary changes left Lee (Lewis) with a high-poverty population. Is there a risk that this could happen to a school like Westfield?
Anonymous wrote:Well at some point soon it will no longer be “the consultant” and the board will need to own the maps.
Anonymous wrote:According to Dr Reid , people that could be affected by the new high school were invited to the open house. But we got the invite and we are in the Madison pyramid.
Anonymous wrote:I don't know the western part of the county as well as the southeastern, but when South County opened the ensuing boundary changes left Lee (Lewis) with a high-poverty population. Is there a risk that this could happen to a school like Westfield?