Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
But the option program at ATS can technically go anywhere. They need a neighborhood scjool closer to Ballston as that area is just going to continue to grow.
Fully agree. There should be walkable elementary schools in the Rosslyn to Ballston corridor. ATS's building is just on the edge of Ballston and should be neighborhood.
Anonymous wrote:About moving the immersion schools close to the spanish speakers. You all make an assumption (as does the county) that the immigrants who live in the county's lower income housing are spanish speakers. A larger percentage are not.
My kid was at Claremont and a larger percentage of the spanish speakers were middle or upper middle class. They are educated professionals. That is why both Key and Claremont may be 50% spanish speakers, but not 50% free and reduced lunch. At a PTA meeting with a SB member, it was made very clear that if the SB wants more lower income families, it needs to educate those families about the options and why dual immersion is good for them. Many immigrants DO NOT WANT IMMERSION. They want their kids to learn english asap.
Anonymous wrote:Gah it’s one county, one tiny county. I would love the SB to just give up and draw crazy boundaries for all the schools. If you are on a bus you are fair game for crossing 50 ah the horror.
Nottingham should be ATS. Immersion moves to Barcoft. Key and ASFS are neighborhood. Half of Oakridge goes to Drew. Fleet takes Henry boundaries. Campbell stays where it is.
Anonymous wrote:Gah it’s one county, one tiny county. I would love the SB to just give up and draw crazy boundaries for all the schools. If you are on a bus you are fair game for crossing 50 ah the horror.
Nottingham should be ATS. Immersion moves to Barcoft. Key and ASFS are neighborhood. Half of Oakridge goes to Drew. Fleet takes Henry boundaries. Campbell stays where it is.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sure, Fleet was supposed to be a school for south arlington, but if it allows north arlington to have more neighborhood schools, sure it is fine.
Don't you worry. NVD is on it and Long Branch as a neighborhood school isn't going anywhere. They are going to send all the south Arlington kids back across the wall, but nobody in Lyon Park will be made to hoof it across the DMZ for ES.
Anonymous wrote:Sure, Fleet was supposed to be a school for south arlington, but if it allows north arlington to have more neighborhood schools, sure it is fine.
Anonymous wrote:Sure, Fleet was supposed to be a school for south arlington, but if it allows north arlington to have more neighborhood schools, sure it is fine.
Anonymous wrote:What about Key immersion to Long Branch? It's only 23% potential walkers, if they'd actually included the five lowest on the master chart like the analysis implied they would, Long Branch would have a check there. It would need 6 buses to fill the rest of the school so it fell just below the staff cut-off on that criteria. It can't go to 750 but it does have the ability to add capacity with trailers for flexibility, and they could probably gradually reduce the size of the program because if Key and ASFS are both neighborhood schools, it would probably reduce the demand for the immersion program over there. Fleet opening up would give APS the ability to move some of the current Long Branch population there, Reed opening will free up capacity to shift planning units from Long Branch to Barrett, and Hoffman-Boston typically has some extra capacity so they could pick up some too in order to avoid pushing too much of the displaced population toward ASFS and Key (although with both being neighborhood school, each would be under pressure to take fewer students).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:About moving the immersion schools close to the spanish speakers. You all make an assumption (as does the county) that the immigrants who live in the county's lower income housing are spanish speakers. A larger percentage are not.
My kid was at Claremont and a larger percentage of the spanish speakers were middle or upper middle class. They are educated professionals. That is why both Key and Claremont may be 50% spanish speakers, but not 50% free and reduced lunch. At a PTA meeting with a SB member, it was made very clear that if the SB wants more lower income families, it needs to educate those families about the options and why dual immersion is good for them. Many immigrants DO NOT WANT IMMERSION. They want their kids to learn english asap.
Have they considered the possibility that they would learn English more quickly in immersion? That they may not perform so far below their English-fluent classmates if they were to learn in the two languages? You are correct - APS needs to educate the families on the benefits the immersion approach may offer in obtaining the goals they have for their children.
Anonymous wrote:About moving the immersion schools close to the spanish speakers. You all make an assumption (as does the county) that the immigrants who live in the county's lower income housing are spanish speakers. A larger percentage are not.
My kid was at Claremont and a larger percentage of the spanish speakers were middle or upper middle class. They are educated professionals. That is why both Key and Claremont may be 50% spanish speakers, but not 50% free and reduced lunch. At a PTA meeting with a SB member, it was made very clear that if the SB wants more lower income families, it needs to educate those families about the options and why dual immersion is good for them. Many immigrants DO NOT WANT IMMERSION. They want their kids to learn english asap.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I can’t see the point of switching Carlin springs and Campbell. Both are small schools. Carlin springs is not much bigger than Campbell
Carlin Springs if 585 capacity v. Campbell's 436. I'd consider 150 students significant. Plus, there is a lot of open green space on the Kenmore site.........
The thing is, all schools are choice schools. If Randolph, Barcroft, Drew, etc aren't at capacity now, what makes the staff think they ever will be? People vote with their feet. Shifting things around to take advantage of space at schools UMC families will avoid is foolish. It's why Henry and Oakridge are so overcrowded.
All Arlington schools are good. Haven’t you heard?
So what’s the solution? Move immersion 2 south as well? Move ATS south?
I’ve been saying make Barcroft and Randolph and Carlin Springs immersion schools for years. Cater to the immigrants and give the middle class a reason to want to be there. Make those neighborhood schools immersion schools.
Why don't we just make them Spanish schools where everything is taught in Spanish and complete the segregation of Latinos and Hispanics from everyone else? geez.
What a stupid remark. I’m sorry you are so uncomfortable with our immigrant communities.