Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:But it is. We may as well just say all of FCPS is "advanced" since that's clearly what everyone wants to hear.
But it is not. See the statistics posted as follow up materials to the July 2013 School Board meeting.
But it is. Stats from a couple of recent years don't tell the whole story. How many new AAP centers are they opening to reduce overcrowding? If you build it they will come. I predict those will become as crowded as the ones they replaced. It's much easier for principals to allow additional AAP students who are at the margin if there's the perception that there's room.
Absolutely true.
One of the goals for these new Local Level IV Centers is to provide access to the AAP curriculum to students that would otherwise not have such access.
What is the goal of center schools in areas in which all the feeder schools already have large populations of LLIV students? Why is there such an overlap in services?
Because not all schools in all areas of the county have 2 or more classes full of AAP eligible students. What works in one zip code does not necessarily work in another zip code.
Then FCPS should take that into account when deciding which schools will have center access and which won't. Better yet, make all schools have LLIV and turn "centers" back into neighborhood schools.
Then people complain about unequal services in the county.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:But it is. We may as well just say all of FCPS is "advanced" since that's clearly what everyone wants to hear.
But it is not. See the statistics posted as follow up materials to the July 2013 School Board meeting.
But it is. Stats from a couple of recent years don't tell the whole story. How many new AAP centers are they opening to reduce overcrowding? If you build it they will come. I predict those will become as crowded as the ones they replaced. It's much easier for principals to allow additional AAP students who are at the margin if there's the perception that there's room.
Absolutely true.
One of the goals for these new Local Level IV Centers is to provide access to the AAP curriculum to students that would otherwise not have such access.
What is the goal of center schools in areas in which all the feeder schools already have large populations of LLIV students? Why is there such an overlap in services?
Because not all schools in all areas of the county have 2 or more classes full of AAP eligible students. What works in one zip code does not necessarily work in another zip code.
Then FCPS should take that into account when deciding which schools will have center access and which won't. Better yet, make all schools have LLIV and turn "centers" back into neighborhood schools.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:But it is. We may as well just say all of FCPS is "advanced" since that's clearly what everyone wants to hear.
But it is not. See the statistics posted as follow up materials to the July 2013 School Board meeting.
But it is. Stats from a couple of recent years don't tell the whole story. How many new AAP centers are they opening to reduce overcrowding? If you build it they will come. I predict those will become as crowded as the ones they replaced. It's much easier for principals to allow additional AAP students who are at the margin if there's the perception that there's room.
Absolutely true.
One of the goals for these new Local Level IV Centers is to provide access to the AAP curriculum to students that would otherwise not have such access.
What is the goal of center schools in areas in which all the feeder schools already have large populations of LLIV students? Why is there such an overlap in services?
Because not all schools in all areas of the county have 2 or more classes full of AAP eligible students. What works in one zip code does not necessarily work in another zip code.
Then FCPS should take that into account when deciding which schools will have center access and which won't. Better yet, make all schools have LLIV and turn "centers" back into neighborhood schools.
They do.
No, they very clearly don't. Check out Colvin Run (center) and its feeder schools. There is no need for those schools to bus their AAP kids to a center.
Then FCPS should take that into account when deciding which schools will have center access and which won't.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:But it is. We may as well just say all of FCPS is "advanced" since that's clearly what everyone wants to hear.
But it is not. See the statistics posted as follow up materials to the July 2013 School Board meeting.
But it is. Stats from a couple of recent years don't tell the whole story. How many new AAP centers are they opening to reduce overcrowding? If you build it they will come. I predict those will become as crowded as the ones they replaced. It's much easier for principals to allow additional AAP students who are at the margin if there's the perception that there's room.
Absolutely true.
One of the goals for these new Local Level IV Centers is to provide access to the AAP curriculum to students that would otherwise not have such access.
What is the goal of center schools in areas in which all the feeder schools already have large populations of LLIV students? Why is there such an overlap in services?
Because not all schools in all areas of the county have 2 or more classes full of AAP eligible students. What works in one zip code does not necessarily work in another zip code.
Then FCPS should take that into account when deciding which schools will have center access and which won't. Better yet, make all schools have LLIV and turn "centers" back into neighborhood schools.
They do.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:But it is. We may as well just say all of FCPS is "advanced" since that's clearly what everyone wants to hear.
But it is not. See the statistics posted as follow up materials to the July 2013 School Board meeting.
But it is. Stats from a couple of recent years don't tell the whole story. How many new AAP centers are they opening to reduce overcrowding? If you build it they will come. I predict those will become as crowded as the ones they replaced. It's much easier for principals to allow additional AAP students who are at the margin if there's the perception that there's room.
Absolutely true.
One of the goals for these new Local Level IV Centers is to provide access to the AAP curriculum to students that would otherwise not have such access.
What is the goal of center schools in areas in which all the feeder schools already have large populations of LLIV students? Why is there such an overlap in services?
Because not all schools in all areas of the county have 2 or more classes full of AAP eligible students. What works in one zip code does not necessarily work in another zip code.
Then FCPS should take that into account when deciding which schools will have center access and which won't. Better yet, make all schools have LLIV and turn "centers" back into neighborhood schools.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:But it is. We may as well just say all of FCPS is "advanced" since that's clearly what everyone wants to hear.
But it is not. See the statistics posted as follow up materials to the July 2013 School Board meeting.
But it is. Stats from a couple of recent years don't tell the whole story. How many new AAP centers are they opening to reduce overcrowding? If you build it they will come. I predict those will become as crowded as the ones they replaced. It's much easier for principals to allow additional AAP students who are at the margin if there's the perception that there's room.
Absolutely true.
One of the goals for these new Local Level IV Centers is to provide access to the AAP curriculum to students that would otherwise not have such access.
What is the goal of center schools in areas in which all the feeder schools already have large populations of LLIV students? Why is there such an overlap in services?
Because not all schools in all areas of the county have 2 or more classes full of AAP eligible students. What works in one zip code does not necessarily work in another zip code.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:But it is. We may as well just say all of FCPS is "advanced" since that's clearly what everyone wants to hear.
But it is not. See the statistics posted as follow up materials to the July 2013 School Board meeting.
But it is. Stats from a couple of recent years don't tell the whole story. How many new AAP centers are they opening to reduce overcrowding? If you build it they will come. I predict those will become as crowded as the ones they replaced. It's much easier for principals to allow additional AAP students who are at the margin if there's the perception that there's room.
Absolutely true.
One of the goals for these new Local Level IV Centers is to provide access to the AAP curriculum to students that would otherwise not have such access.
What is the goal of center schools in areas in which all the feeder schools already have large populations of LLIV students? Why is there such an overlap in services?
Anonymous wrote:then why not offer AAP to everyone?
or put local level IV in every school?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:But it is. We may as well just say all of FCPS is "advanced" since that's clearly what everyone wants to hear.
But it is not. See the statistics posted as follow up materials to the July 2013 School Board meeting.
But it is. Stats from a couple of recent years don't tell the whole story. How many new AAP centers are they opening to reduce overcrowding? If you build it they will come. I predict those will become as crowded as the ones they replaced. It's much easier for principals to allow additional AAP students who are at the margin if there's the perception that there's room.
Absolutely true.
One of the goals for these new Local Level IV Centers is to provide access to the AAP curriculum to students that would otherwise not have such access.
Anonymous wrote:
or put local level IV in every school?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:But it is. We may as well just say all of FCPS is "advanced" since that's clearly what everyone wants to hear.
But it is not. See the statistics posted as follow up materials to the July 2013 School Board meeting.
But it is. Stats from a couple of recent years don't tell the whole story. How many new AAP centers are they opening to reduce overcrowding? If you build it they will come. I predict those will become as crowded as the ones they replaced. It's much easier for principals to allow additional AAP students who are at the margin if there's the perception that there's room.
Absolutely true.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:But it is. We may as well just say all of FCPS is "advanced" since that's clearly what everyone wants to hear.
But it is not. See the statistics posted as follow up materials to the July 2013 School Board meeting.
But it is. Stats from a couple of recent years don't tell the whole story. How many new AAP centers are they opening to reduce overcrowding? If you build it they will come. I predict those will become as crowded as the ones they replaced. It's much easier for principals to allow additional AAP students who are at the margin if there's the perception that there's room.
Anonymous wrote:No, but in the past ten years, the trend was an increasing proportion of students going into AAP until recently.
Anonymous wrote:Thankfully AAP is not ever-expanding.