Anonymous wrote:Yes, they just walk through the streets through busy intersections, hundreds of teens without waiting for a walk signal. It's a mess. You know what would make this better. If they séparés the two campuses and the kids just stayed in one building! It's maddening why ACPS won't do this. Why make things so difficult for No reason.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:ACPS really need to reconsider this “connected high school” thing and look at a two school model (divided by grades or education tracks/programs). Shuttling that many kids on a daily basis is a wild approach and this appears to be a failed experiment! They are contorting themselves by insisting on one high school. Nowhere else in the country have I heard of a school board refusing to add additional high schools when the need so clearly arises (it should have been done decades ago in Alexandria City).
“Decades ago” Alexandria had three high schools: GW, Hammond, and TC. The consolidation of the schools (then segregated along neighborhood and thus racial lines) into one high school with both Black and White students was memorialized in the blockbuster movie Remember the Titan some 25 years ago.
Sports are still big in Alexandria and the city probably wanted to honor the legacy of the movie, hence the one high school approach going forward.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:ACPS really need to reconsider this “connected high school” thing and look at a two school model (divided by grades or education tracks/programs). Shuttling that many kids on a daily basis is a wild approach and this appears to be a failed experiment! They are contorting themselves by insisting on one high school. Nowhere else in the country have I heard of a school board refusing to add additional high schools when the need so clearly arises (it should have been done decades ago in Alexandria City).
“Decades ago” Alexandria had three high schools: GW, Hammond, and TC. The consolidation of the schools (then segregated along neighborhood and thus racial lines) into one high school with both Black and White students was memorialized in the blockbuster movie Remember the Titan some 25 years ago.
Sports are still big in Alexandria and the city probably wanted to honor the legacy of the movie, hence the one high school approach going forward.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is it just me, or could all of this be solved with a crossing guard?
Maybe two crossing guards?
At the most, two guards and occasional PD help with traffic?
It is you. Do you live here? There legit isn’t even enough room on the narrow sidewalks for the kids to wait for the light and walk. There are over a thousand kids, at any one time, transferring.
I live nearby and was in that intersection 3 times between 2-3:30. 1) that campus definitely isn’t closed, kids all over Bradlee at 2pm. Everywhere. Waiting for bus, hanging in front of McDonalds, sitting in front of Safeway, etc. I thought school got out around 3-3:15. At 2, 2:30 and 3:30 kids all over King, Braddock and Quaker. Kids waiting for the light to change so they’re piling into the actual street without a care in the world that their feet can get run over or worse. Kids jaywalking. Kids darting out and running. Kids who seem to deliberately walk against the light to upset drivers who have the right of way.
You think 2 crossing guards is going to fix that? Lol. BTW there already were 2 cop cars in bradlee parking lot by McDonalds, at 2pm.
Ok, thank you for the context and details. It’s unbelievable to me that 1,000 kids would need to switch at any given time. Given that ACPS said that would rarely be necessary if I recall correctly. Sigh.
Anonymous wrote:ACPS really need to reconsider this “connected high school” thing and look at a two school model (divided by grades or education tracks/programs). Shuttling that many kids on a daily basis is a wild approach and this appears to be a failed experiment! They are contorting themselves by insisting on one high school. Nowhere else in the country have I heard of a school board refusing to add additional high schools when the need so clearly arises (it should have been done decades ago in Alexandria City).
Anonymous wrote:ACPS really need to reconsider this “connected high school” thing and look at a two school model (divided by grades or education tracks/programs). Shuttling that many kids on a daily basis is a wild approach and this appears to be a failed experiment! They are contorting themselves by insisting on one high school. Nowhere else in the country have I heard of a school board refusing to add additional high schools when the need so clearly arises (it should have been done decades ago in Alexandria City).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is it just me, or could all of this be solved with a crossing guard?
Maybe two crossing guards?
At the most, two guards and occasional PD help with traffic?
It is you. Do you live here? There legit isn’t even enough room on the narrow sidewalks for the kids to wait for the light and walk. There are over a thousand kids, at any one time, transferring.
I live nearby and was in that intersection 3 times between 2-3:30. 1) that campus definitely isn’t closed, kids all over Bradlee at 2pm. Everywhere. Waiting for bus, hanging in front of McDonalds, sitting in front of Safeway, etc. I thought school got out around 3-3:15. At 2, 2:30 and 3:30 kids all over King, Braddock and Quaker. Kids waiting for the light to change so they’re piling into the actual street without a care in the world that their feet can get run over or worse. Kids jaywalking. Kids darting out and running. Kids who seem to deliberately walk against the light to upset drivers who have the right of way.
You think 2 crossing guards is going to fix that? Lol. BTW there already were 2 cop cars in bradlee parking lot by McDonalds, at 2pm.
Anonymous wrote:Is it just me, or could all of this be solved with a crossing guard?
Maybe two crossing guards?
At the most, two guards and occasional PD help with traffic?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is it just me, or could all of this be solved with a crossing guard?
Maybe two crossing guards?
At the most, two guards and occasional PD help with traffic?
It’s about .7 miles between campuses so definitely walkable but about 15 mins and the transition between classes is only 13 mins. Ridiculous to shuttle 1,600 kids for such a short distance. Probably takes longer by bus than walking. What a mess!
Anonymous wrote:https://actheogony.com/8080/news/transportation-issues-plague-school-year
Absolutely bananas. What a colossal waste of students time. 1,600 student commuting between campuses everyday.
Anonymous wrote:Is it just me, or could all of this be solved with a crossing guard?
Maybe two crossing guards?
At the most, two guards and occasional PD help with traffic?