Anonymous wrote:For those of us who live in the Langley pyramid and pay upwards of 30K plus in property taxes-not exactly looking to bring in those from the apartment complexes in Tysons-a la Korean families moving right before high school so their kids can attend TJ.
Anonymous wrote:For those of us who live in the Langley pyramid and pay upwards of 30K plus in property taxes-not exactly looking to bring in those from the apartment complexes in Tysons-a la Korean families moving right before high school so their kids can attend TJ.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What I don't understand is why FCPS is proposing to expand Langley as part of its renovation when its enrollment is declining. Then they'll have to find yet more students from distant neighborhoods to fill up the building. It would make more sense to expand the capacities at the schools with increasing numbers of students and let Langley be a smaller school if people with kids don't want to live way out in Great Falls any more.
Tyson's Corner is expected to have 100,000 more residents. All area HSs will have to expand to meet the increased population. The expanded district will not be far from Langley. Mostly likely the rest of Franklin Sherman and then carving out parts of Chesterbrook and/or Kent Gardens. All of which are closer to Lngley than much of the western part of Langley's current boundary.
You will not find a single recent FCPS document that suggests this is contemplated, but you will find several hints that FCPS is thinking about moving areas further out in Vienna that are closer to Marshall and McLean to Langley. It seems short-sighted and detrimental to the other schools. Why not look for some way to create some SES diversity at Langley, rather than continue to expand its boundaries with even more neighborhoods of single-family homes that aren't particularly close to the school?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What I don't understand is why FCPS is proposing to expand Langley as part of its renovation when its enrollment is declining. Then they'll have to find yet more students from distant neighborhoods to fill up the building. It would make more sense to expand the capacities at the schools with increasing numbers of students and let Langley be a smaller school if people with kids don't want to live way out in Great Falls any more.
Tyson's Corner is expected to have 100,000 more residents. All area HSs will have to expand to meet the increased population. The expanded district will not be far from Langley. Mostly likely the rest of Franklin Sherman and then carving out parts of Chesterbrook and/or Kent Gardens. All of which are closer to Lngley than much of the western part of Langley's current boundary.
Anonymous wrote:What I don't understand is why FCPS is proposing to expand Langley as part of its renovation when its enrollment is declining. Then they'll have to find yet more students from distant neighborhoods to fill up the building. It would make more sense to expand the capacities at the schools with increasing numbers of students and let Langley be a smaller school if people with kids don't want to live way out in Great Falls any more.
Anonymous wrote:What I don't understand is why FCPS is proposing to expand Langley as part of its renovation when its enrollment is declining. Then they'll have to find yet more students from distant neighborhoods to fill up the building. It would make more sense to expand the capacities at the schools with increasing numbers of students and let Langley be a smaller school if people with kids don't want to live way out in Great Falls any more.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'll just point out again that it's not Longfellow enrollment trends that will force changes at Cooper. It's the declining enrollment at Cooper and the overcrowding at Kilmer, which gets the Cooper AAP kids from Great Falls.
PP here-I believe I already stated that I wasn't qualified to comment on Kilmer, so the above snotty comment wasn't necessary.
I really don't get why the school board feels it makes sense to have AAP in all middle achools. In Cluster 1, it makes most sense for Longfellow to be THE center for middle school. They clearly have the teaching resources and extracurricular infrastructure already in place as well as the renovated building. It would also solve the problems of critical mass and AAP vs Non AAP populations. If transportation is the issue do limited or no bussing. I would gladly drive my kid for an advanced education in an established center-and I'm sure others feel the same, since clearly the main issue here is money (or lack thereof in FCPS) driving these decisions.
It doesn't make sense when Cooper is under capacity because they send AAP students to Longfeloow and Longfellow is over capacity becasue of those same students. There are plenty of AAP students in the Cooper district for a robust AAp program. I would also send half the expereince AAP teachers at Longfellow to Cooper so they can benefit from the experienced teacher resources. The extracurricular stuff could easily be done at Cooper now. I don't know why they don't do it currently. The issue isn't money (as it wouldn't save all that much), it is space and the fact that the over large AAP population at Longfellow adversely affects the Gen- Ed population at Longfellow.
Therein lies the problem-none of the Longfellow teachers would be willing to come over to Cooper to get a new center up and running-if there were, I'm sure parents at Churchill and Spring Hill would feel differently about allowing their kids to be a "guinea pig" for a new center. It takes time and energy as well as appropriate, qualified center teachers to lead a new center-and despite all of the recent talk on the subject, Cooper seems to be doing nothing in the meantime to make itself more attractive to kids currently at the Churchill Road Center or Spring Hill local level IV.
I sure as heck don't want my 5th grader to be part of the pseudo-center at Cooper they keep talking about creating, and I doubt many would-and given property taxes I pay to live in the Langley pyramid, it should be my choice to do what's best for my kid.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'll just point out again that it's not Longfellow enrollment trends that will force changes at Cooper. It's the declining enrollment at Cooper and the overcrowding at Kilmer, which gets the Cooper AAP kids from Great Falls.
So it's fair to all of a sudden overcrowd Cooper overnight and force kids into trailers when Longfellow just undertook a nice renovation to increase capacity (I can't comment on Kilmer since I know nothing about their building or future renovation plans).
Longfellow is at capacity even with its Reno. It is slated to go over capacity shortly. People are not saying to do it over night. This has been talked about for at least a year and Cooper is slated to be under capacity. I don't think it is fair for Cooper parents to continue to deny AAP to their neighborhood children and require them to be bussed all the way across town to Longfellow. I also don't think it is fair for Cooper parents to say they don't want their AAP students but that they perfectly fine for them to be overwhelming another school's resources. Cooper should take care of its own students - all of them.
I remember you parents from the Haycock AAP redistricting last year. Longfellow is not even over capacity yet (as many other schools are) and you're complaining and pushing kids out already.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm saying have Longfellow be CENTER ONLY-GE kids from that district would go to Cooper.
Oh.
I hadn't realized that's what you had in mind. That's certainly not going to happen, unless FCPS decides to rename Longfellow TJMSST and make it a magnet school.
Anonymous wrote:I'm saying have Longfellow be CENTER ONLY-GE kids from that district would go to Cooper.