Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There is no way logistically the sports thing will work.
Busing kids from Western after school to multiple different high schools and then back again? Here's just one example: the freshman and JV basketball teams leave right after school on a bus to get to away games on time. There is no give in the schedule to wait for a bus from Western to drive over 1 student to the base school to then get on the basketball bus. I can think of a hundred more logistical problems.
The coaches at base schools will just not take "western" kids to avoid the hassle.
HB Woodlawn and Arlington Tech in Arlington don’t have sports teams and the kids can play for Yorktown, W-L, or Wakefield.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There is no way logistically the sports thing will work.
Busing kids from Western after school to multiple different high schools and then back again? Here's just one example: the freshman and JV basketball teams leave right after school on a bus to get to away games on time. There is no give in the schedule to wait for a bus from Western to drive over 1 student to the base school to then get on the basketball bus. I can think of a hundred more logistical problems.
The coaches at base schools will just not take "western" kids to avoid the hassle.
HB Woodlawn and Arlington Tech in Arlington don’t have sports teams and the kids can play for Yorktown, W-L, or Wakefield.
Anonymous wrote:There is no way logistically the sports thing will work.
Busing kids from Western after school to multiple different high schools and then back again? Here's just one example: the freshman and JV basketball teams leave right after school on a bus to get to away games on time. There is no give in the schedule to wait for a bus from Western to drive over 1 student to the base school to then get on the basketball bus. I can think of a hundred more logistical problems.
The coaches at base schools will just not take "western" kids to avoid the hassle.
Anonymous wrote:Thats a unique way of handling sports.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Agreed.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Thats going to be hard for the kids.Anonymous wrote:I heard renovations will take place for the first 2-3 years.
When will FCPS begin community presentations detailing what will be done and how it will be done.
I’m scared our kids will be in Trailers and that those will tarnish their first impressions of the new high school.
I don't think anyone will be in trailers but it would have made SO MUCH MORE SENSE for them to just wait to open it in 2027.
Conversation surrounding it is such a blunder with everything going on, when we can't necessarily gather a sense of their full intent behind the purchase besides overcrowding relief and aerospace technology, advanced robotics, and advanced AI courses.
In boundary should come first. Then special programs. What do they have for brains?
Agreed. I think they are hoping the option numbers give the a better idea about who wants to move and they can use that as cover to move some schools over others.
Problem with that is:
1. These are kids who are starting or continuing in high school now--not in a year or so.
2. Kids who want sports are not likely to opt in. And, they have been pretty vague about that issue.
3. Sophomore happy where they are would be less likely to switch.
They have been clear on sports. The first year they will provide transportation to the old base school for sports since there will not be any VHSL sports at the school. VHSL is all or nothing, if you have a VHSL freshman or JV team for one sport, you cannot allow kids to play a different sport at the old base school. The hope is to have enough kids to be able to start VHSL sports in the second year but that might be delayed to the third year. Until the sports start, the kids will be bussed to the old school.
That said, people who want sports are more likely to stay at the base school and not opt in to the new school. Plenty of kids don’t play a sport and are not interested in a sport, I doubt that is as limiting as people think.
I agree with that 100%Anonymous wrote:Sounds like a train wreck waiting to happen.
Thats a unique way of handling sports.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Agreed.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Thats going to be hard for the kids.Anonymous wrote:I heard renovations will take place for the first 2-3 years.
When will FCPS begin community presentations detailing what will be done and how it will be done.
I’m scared our kids will be in Trailers and that those will tarnish their first impressions of the new high school.
I don't think anyone will be in trailers but it would have made SO MUCH MORE SENSE for them to just wait to open it in 2027.
Conversation surrounding it is such a blunder with everything going on, when we can't necessarily gather a sense of their full intent behind the purchase besides overcrowding relief and aerospace technology, advanced robotics, and advanced AI courses.
In boundary should come first. Then special programs. What do they have for brains?
Agreed. I think they are hoping the option numbers give the a better idea about who wants to move and they can use that as cover to move some schools over others.
Problem with that is:
1. These are kids who are starting or continuing in high school now--not in a year or so.
2. Kids who want sports are not likely to opt in. And, they have been pretty vague about that issue.
3. Sophomore happy where they are would be less likely to switch.
They have been clear on sports. The first year they will provide transportation to the old base school for sports since there will not be any VHSL sports at the school. VHSL is all or nothing, if you have a VHSL freshman or JV team for one sport, you cannot allow kids to play a different sport at the old base school. The hope is to have enough kids to be able to start VHSL sports in the second year but that might be delayed to the third year. Until the sports start, the kids will be bussed to the old school.
That said, people who want sports are more likely to stay at the base school and not opt in to the new school. Plenty of kids don’t play a sport and are not interested in a sport, I doubt that is as limiting as people think.
Avoid is a sterong with a highly negative connotation.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Agreed.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Thats going to be hard for the kids.Anonymous wrote:I heard renovations will take place for the first 2-3 years.
When will FCPS begin community presentations detailing what will be done and how it will be done.
I’m scared our kids will be in Trailers and that those will tarnish their first impressions of the new high school.
I don't think anyone will be in trailers but it would have made SO MUCH MORE SENSE for them to just wait to open it in 2027.
Conversation surrounding it is such a blunder with everything going on, when we can't necessarily gather a sense of their full intent behind the purchase besides overcrowding relief and aerospace technology, advanced robotics, and advanced AI courses.
In boundary should come first. Then special programs. What do they have for brains?
Agreed. I think they are hoping the option numbers give the a better idea about who wants to move and they can use that as cover to move some schools over others.
Problem with that is:
1. These are kids who are starting or continuing in high school now--not in a year or so.
2. Kids who want sports are not likely to opt in. And, they have been pretty vague about that issue.
3. Sophomore happy where they are would be less likely to switch.
They have been clear on sports. The first year they will provide transportation to the old base school for sports since there will not be any VHSL sports at the school. VHSL is all or nothing, if you have a VHSL freshman or JV team for one sport, you cannot allow kids to play a different sport at the old base school. The hope is to have enough kids to be able to start VHSL sports in the second year but that might be delayed to the third year. Until the sports start, the kids will be bussed to the old school.
That said, people who want sports are more likely to stay at the base school and not opt in to the new school. Plenty of kids don’t play a sport and are not interested in a sport, I doubt that is as limiting as people think.
There are kids who don't play sports who still want to attend a school with sports, or participate in activities like marching band that get attention during the halftime of football games.
I think the way Reid has approached the opening of Western has been unfortunate on many fronts, but if some families who want to avoid Westfield or South Lakes think it's a good option starting this fall then good for them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Agreed.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Thats going to be hard for the kids.Anonymous wrote:I heard renovations will take place for the first 2-3 years.
When will FCPS begin community presentations detailing what will be done and how it will be done.
I’m scared our kids will be in Trailers and that those will tarnish their first impressions of the new high school.
I don't think anyone will be in trailers but it would have made SO MUCH MORE SENSE for them to just wait to open it in 2027.
Conversation surrounding it is such a blunder with everything going on, when we can't necessarily gather a sense of their full intent behind the purchase besides overcrowding relief and aerospace technology, advanced robotics, and advanced AI courses.
In boundary should come first. Then special programs. What do they have for brains?
Agreed. I think they are hoping the option numbers give the a better idea about who wants to move and they can use that as cover to move some schools over others.
Problem with that is:
1. These are kids who are starting or continuing in high school now--not in a year or so.
2. Kids who want sports are not likely to opt in. And, they have been pretty vague about that issue.
3. Sophomore happy where they are would be less likely to switch.
They have been clear on sports. The first year they will provide transportation to the old base school for sports since there will not be any VHSL sports at the school. VHSL is all or nothing, if you have a VHSL freshman or JV team for one sport, you cannot allow kids to play a different sport at the old base school. The hope is to have enough kids to be able to start VHSL sports in the second year but that might be delayed to the third year. Until the sports start, the kids will be bussed to the old school.
That said, people who want sports are more likely to stay at the base school and not opt in to the new school. Plenty of kids don’t play a sport and are not interested in a sport, I doubt that is as limiting as people think.
Yes.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Agreed.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Thats going to be hard for the kids.Anonymous wrote:I heard renovations will take place for the first 2-3 years.
When will FCPS begin community presentations detailing what will be done and how it will be done.
I’m scared our kids will be in Trailers and that those will tarnish their first impressions of the new high school.
I don't think anyone will be in trailers but it would have made SO MUCH MORE SENSE for them to just wait to open it in 2027.
Conversation surrounding it is such a blunder with everything going on, when we can't necessarily gather a sense of their full intent behind the purchase besides overcrowding relief and aerospace technology, advanced robotics, and advanced AI courses.
In boundary should come first. Then special programs. What do they have for brains?
Agreed. I think they are hoping the option numbers give the a better idea about who wants to move and they can use that as cover to move some schools over others.
Problem with that is:
1. These are kids who are starting or continuing in high school now--not in a year or so.
2. Kids who want sports are not likely to opt in. And, they have been pretty vague about that issue.
3. Sophomore happy where they are would be less likely to switch.
They have been clear on sports. The first year they will provide transportation to the old base school for sports since there will not be any VHSL sports at the school. VHSL is all or nothing, if you have a VHSL freshman or JV team for one sport, you cannot allow kids to play a different sport at the old base school. The hope is to have enough kids to be able to start VHSL sports in the second year but that might be delayed to the third year. Until the sports start, the kids will be bussed to the old school.
That said, people who want sports are more likely to stay at the base school and not opt in to the new school. Plenty of kids don’t play a sport and are not interested in a sport, I doubt that is as limiting as people think.
That said, people who want sports are more likely to stay at the base school and not opt in to the new school. Plenty of kids don’t play a sport and are not interested in a sport, I doubt that is as limiting as people think.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Agreed.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Thats going to be hard for the kids.Anonymous wrote:I heard renovations will take place for the first 2-3 years.
When will FCPS begin community presentations detailing what will be done and how it will be done.
I’m scared our kids will be in Trailers and that those will tarnish their first impressions of the new high school.
I don't think anyone will be in trailers but it would have made SO MUCH MORE SENSE for them to just wait to open it in 2027.
Conversation surrounding it is such a blunder with everything going on, when we can't necessarily gather a sense of their full intent behind the purchase besides overcrowding relief and aerospace technology, advanced robotics, and advanced AI courses.
In boundary should come first. Then special programs. What do they have for brains?
Agreed. I think they are hoping the option numbers give the a better idea about who wants to move and they can use that as cover to move some schools over others.
Problem with that is:
1. These are kids who are starting or continuing in high school now--not in a year or so.
2. Kids who want sports are not likely to opt in. And, they have been pretty vague about that issue.
3. Sophomore happy where they are would be less likely to switch.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Agreed.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Thats going to be hard for the kids.Anonymous wrote:I heard renovations will take place for the first 2-3 years.
When will FCPS begin community presentations detailing what will be done and how it will be done.
I’m scared our kids will be in Trailers and that those will tarnish their first impressions of the new high school.
I don't think anyone will be in trailers but it would have made SO MUCH MORE SENSE for them to just wait to open it in 2027.
Conversation surrounding it is such a blunder with everything going on, when we can't necessarily gather a sense of their full intent behind the purchase besides overcrowding relief and aerospace technology, advanced robotics, and advanced AI courses.
In boundary should come first. Then special programs. What do they have for brains?
Agreed. I think they are hoping the option numbers give the a better idea about who wants to move and they can use that as cover to move some schools over others.
Problem with that is:
1. These are kids who are starting or continuing in high school now--not in a year or so.
2. Kids who want sports are not likely to opt in. And, they have been pretty vague about that issue.
3. Sophomore happy where they are would be less likely to switch.