Anonymous wrote:Hi, I have a son entering Kindergarten in August. I applied for the lottery because Arlington Traditional was my first choice. I had to apply to both ATS and Campbell because I do not want my son to go to Carlin Springs where we live. I did not realize that the lottery was this hard. We are spot #114 for ATS and #13 for Campbell. Any chance that he may get into Campbell?
I really wish I could have found somewhere in the Arlington Science Focus boundary but I had to move quickly due to a divorce so now I'm really worried. Worse come to worse are there any diverse private schools that parents recommend?
Thank you!
Anonymous wrote:My child is low 100s in the ATS lottery and has moved up 4 spots since it was announced two days ago. Is it a true lottery, or were some districts, demographics, etc. given preference? How many K spots does ATS actually have? Regardless, I'm assuming there's no chance and will proceed accordingly.
Also, for the PP wondering about private schools for K, just research schools and call them up. Some will be taking late applications. No harm in asking.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why does ATS perform so much better than the other option schools and many neighborhood schools? Perhaps APS should look to expand whatever they’re doing there elsewhere?
Compared with neighborhood schools, option schools tend to have more parents who are highly motivated/with the capacity to be involved with their students' education. Involved parents = better performing students. A larger number of involved parents = a larger number of high performing students.
Beyond that, I can't confidently say why ATS scores better than other option schools. The program they describe sounds pretty generic IMO. Not bad, I just never got clarity on what they did that was so different from neighborhood schools. We're at an option school with a surprisingly high (to some parents I've talked to) free and reduced lunch rate. Lower income families absolutely care about their kids, but don't always have as much capacity to be involved. I know this from personal experience as one of the lower income kids at the schools I grew up in. Maybe ATS has a lower free and reduced lunch rate?
http://schoolquality.virginia.gov/schools/arlington-traditional
Arlington Traditional School has an economically disadvantaged rate of 37% and Title I Status begins at 40%
Anonymous wrote:Are you looking at just the school’s overall score? I usually find trends (and limitations of the data) when I dig deeper.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why does ATS perform so much better than the other option schools and many neighborhood schools? Perhaps APS should look to expand whatever they’re doing there elsewhere?
Compared with neighborhood schools, option schools tend to have more parents who are highly motivated/with the capacity to be involved with their students' education. Involved parents = better performing students. A larger number of involved parents = a larger number of high performing students.
Beyond that, I can't confidently say why ATS scores better than other option schools. The program they describe sounds pretty generic IMO. Not bad, I just never got clarity on what they did that was so different from neighborhood schools. We're at an option school with a surprisingly high (to some parents I've talked to) free and reduced lunch rate. Lower income families absolutely care about their kids, but don't always have as much capacity to be involved. I know this from personal experience as one of the lower income kids at the schools I grew up in. Maybe ATS has a lower free and reduced lunch rate?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hi, I have a son entering Kindergarten in August. I applied for the lottery because Arlington Traditional was my first choice. I had to apply to both ATS and Campbell because I do not want my son to go to Carlin Springs where we live. I did not realize that the lottery was this hard. We are spot #114 for ATS and #13 for Campbell. Any chance that he may get into Campbell?
I really wish I could have found somewhere in the Arlington Science Focus boundary but I had to move quickly due to a divorce so now I'm really worried. Worse come to worse are there any diverse private schools that parents recommend?
Thank you!
We could better help if we know what you need - or at least know what you don’t want. What makes Carlin Springs unattractive to you?
Anonymous wrote:Why does ATS perform so much better than the other option schools and many neighborhood schools? Perhaps APS should look to expand whatever they’re doing there elsewhere?
Anonymous wrote:NP with a related question. If someone moves into the district mid year, would they ever have any chance of there being openings at Campbell? Or is there always a waiting list, and therefore zero possibilities for mid year arrivals?
Anonymous wrote:My child is low 100s in the ATS lottery and has moved up 4 spots since it was announced two days ago. Is it a true lottery, or were some districts, demographics, etc. given preference? How many K spots does ATS actually have? Regardless, I'm assuming there's no chance and will proceed accordingly.
Also, for the PP wondering about private schools for K, just research schools and call them up. Some will be taking late applications. No harm in asking.
Anonymous wrote:Hi, I have a son entering Kindergarten in August. I applied for the lottery because Arlington Traditional was my first choice. I had to apply to both ATS and Campbell because I do not want my son to go to Carlin Springs where we live. I did not realize that the lottery was this hard. We are spot #114 for ATS and #13 for Campbell. Any chance that he may get into Campbell?
I really wish I could have found somewhere in the Arlington Science Focus boundary but I had to move quickly due to a divorce so now I'm really worried. Worse come to worse are there any diverse private schools that parents recommend?
Thank you!