Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:When people say that demographics should reflect arlington, you should understand that to mean the school system.
One thing is clear - the demographics will head south if every school is supposed to be the same.
What does this mean?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:When people say that demographics should reflect arlington, you should understand that to mean the school system.
One thing is clear - the demographics will head south if every school is supposed to be the same.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:When people say that demographics should reflect arlington, you should understand that to mean the school system.
One thing is clear - the demographics will head south if every school is supposed to be the same.
Anonymous wrote:When people say that demographics should reflect arlington, you should understand that to mean the school system.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The irony is that Yorktown HS most closely mirrors the demographics of Arlington County.
Interesting- I got on here to debunk this- but when I looked it up apparently the poster is correct...
The county is approximately- 64% white; 15% Latino; 8% African-American; 10% Asian.
https://arlingtonva.s3.dualstack.us-east-1.amazonaws.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/31/2016/04/2016ProfilePagesFINAL.pdf
Yorktown is - 64% white; 15% Latino; 6% African-American; 8% Asian.
http://www.apsva.us/wp-content/uploads/2014/11/Civil-Rights-Table-1-2016-11-30-web.pdf
However- if you just go with students enrolled in APS- it would be 47% white; 28% Latino; 10%African-American; 9% Asian.
I guess the households without Children really do not mirror the demographics of households with children.
I think it makes sense for the schools to reflect the demographics of the school system, not the overall population.
Some would accuse you of moving the goal posts. Several people have insisted it mirror county demographics.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Apart from Glebe, all major arteries in the county run east-west, so it's logical school assignments reflect that.
Spare yourself some mockery and never make that argument again.
Columbia Pike
Arlington
Wilson
Lee
Glebe
4 out of 5 run east west, so shove it, snookums.
And it makes more sense to have our students avoiding the most heavily travelled roads during rush hour. We should not be adding to east-west traffic. Run some additional bus routes north-south onCarlin Springs, Mason, Glebe. Not a big deal.
+1 exactly
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Apart from Glebe, all major arteries in the county run east-west, so it's logical school assignments reflect that.
Spare yourself some mockery and never make that argument again.
Columbia Pike
Arlington
Wilson
Lee
Glebe
4 out of 5 run east west, so shove it, snookums.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Apart from Glebe, all major arteries in the county run east-west, so it's logical school assignments reflect that.
Spare yourself some mockery and never make that argument again.
Anonymous wrote:Apart from Glebe, all major arteries in the county run east-west, so it's logical school assignments reflect that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The irony is that Yorktown HS most closely mirrors the demographics of Arlington County.
Interesting- I got on here to debunk this- but when I looked it up apparently the poster is correct...
The county is approximately- 64% white; 15% Latino; 8% African-American; 10% Asian.
https://arlingtonva.s3.dualstack.us-east-1.amazonaws.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/31/2016/04/2016ProfilePagesFINAL.pdf
Yorktown is - 64% white; 15% Latino; 6% African-American; 8% Asian.
http://www.apsva.us/wp-content/uploads/2014/11/Civil-Rights-Table-1-2016-11-30-web.pdf
However- if you just go with students enrolled in APS- it would be 47% white; 28% Latino; 10%African-American; 9% Asian.
I guess the households without Children really do not mirror the demographics of households with children.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The irony is that Yorktown HS most closely mirrors the demographics of Arlington County.
Interesting- I got on here to debunk this- but when I looked it up apparently the poster is correct...
The county is approximately- 64% white; 15% Latino; 8% African-American; 10% Asian.
https://arlingtonva.s3.dualstack.us-east-1.amazonaws.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/31/2016/04/2016ProfilePagesFINAL.pdf
Yorktown is - 64% white; 15% Latino; 6% African-American; 8% Asian.
http://www.apsva.us/wp-content/uploads/2014/11/Civil-Rights-Table-1-2016-11-30-web.pdf
However- if you just go with students enrolled in APS- it would be 47% white; 28% Latino; 10%African-American; 9% Asian.
I guess the households without Children really do not mirror the demographics of households with children.
I think it makes sense for the schools to reflect the demographics of the school system, not the overall population.
Some would accuse you of moving the goal posts. Several people have insisted it mirror county demographics.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Why should students at the only high school that reflects the demographics of the county move to another high school? Especially when that high school is very diverse and high performing? Isn't the point that that model is working? What purpose would this serve?
Yet another post that shows that the true motives of the student and his supporters are to try and elevate W-L's status (just right) over Yorktown (too white) and Wakefield (too brown).
I have to say it's been well played, but I also have no doubt that the motives are not really so laudable. The W-L crowd occupies a uniquely sanctimonious spot in the county, alternating between talking up their "diversity" and talking up their real estate values.
A high school junior claims to care about balancing school populations across the county, but he's really concerned about real estate values?
I can't get over how hostile you are to a teenager. Why are you so quick to insult him? What did he ever do to you?
Don't respond the this poster. This is a crazy troll who is either a YHS parent or a real estate speculator with homes in the YHS zone who can't stand the idea that W-L is now the most sought-after school. I am not nor will I be a W-L parent. But everyone in my social circle, both those inbounds for Wakefield and those inbounds for Yorktown, would prefer W-L, and it's not for the IB per se. It's for the academic rigor AND diversity that W-L offers.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Some would accuse you of moving the goal posts. Several people have insisted it mirror county demographics.
I suspect that the latter group haven't thought about variations in demographic groups. Unless you're going to send 20-somethings and retirees back to school, you can't make school demographics mirror county demographics. But you can create better-balanced school demographics if that's actually something you value.
And yes, there may be some busing, but it's not overwhelming, and considering the quantity of whining that happens when a bus is taken away and the number of parents who drop their kids off, I am not persuaded that the better balance would really have a significant impact on the percentage of students on buses.
Then they are just making this up as they go along. I mean, talk about your uninformed opinions.
I'm also opposed to opposed to force busing. This is probably while they'll choose choice programs.
I travel back and forth between Yorktown and Wakefield a lot and it's not something I'd wish on a teen on a daily basis.