
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:And I hear the design proposed for the new H-B Woodlawn is $20 million over budget. That's just at the design phase. Of course it will end up even more once it's built. Somehow they'll find the money for that but not the facilities needed in S. Arl.
H-B wasn't that much over budget given the small, complex site in Rosslyn. It's the Stratford Middle School that came in wildly over budget. That was scary.
My issue with HB is the expense vs number seats. 1000 kids for same price as the recent Wakefield rebuild! Yikes!
I totally get that there is an expense to building in Rosslyn - but holy cow!
Sorry for the tangent. Back to elementary schools and how we get our kids into choice schools.
APS is supposed to be revisiting and making changes to elementary school choice boundaries and/or admissions policies over the next couple years. I guess we'll have to stay tuned, but the situation will be addressed.
What does that mean? Making sure we still have choices? Or does that mean eliminating all choices? Should we be comforted or freaked out?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:And I hear the design proposed for the new H-B Woodlawn is $20 million over budget. That's just at the design phase. Of course it will end up even more once it's built. Somehow they'll find the money for that but not the facilities needed in S. Arl.
H-B wasn't that much over budget given the small, complex site in Rosslyn. It's the Stratford Middle School that came in wildly over budget. That was scary.
My issue with HB is the expense vs number seats. 1000 kids for same price as the recent Wakefield rebuild! Yikes!
I totally get that there is an expense to building in Rosslyn - but holy cow!
Sorry for the tangent. Back to elementary schools and how we get our kids into choice schools.
APS is supposed to be revisiting and making changes to elementary school choice boundaries and/or admissions policies over the next couple years. I guess we'll have to stay tuned, but the situation will be addressed.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:And I hear the design proposed for the new H-B Woodlawn is $20 million over budget. That's just at the design phase. Of course it will end up even more once it's built. Somehow they'll find the money for that but not the facilities needed in S. Arl.
H-B wasn't that much over budget given the small, complex site in Rosslyn. It's the Stratford Middle School that came in wildly over budget. That was scary.
My issue with HB is the expense vs number seats. 1000 kids for same price as the recent Wakefield rebuild! Yikes!
I totally get that there is an expense to building in Rosslyn - but holy cow!
Sorry for the tangent. Back to elementary schools and how we get our kids into choice schools.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:And I hear the design proposed for the new H-B Woodlawn is $20 million over budget. That's just at the design phase. Of course it will end up even more once it's built. Somehow they'll find the money for that but not the facilities needed in S. Arl.
H-B wasn't that much over budget given the small, complex site in Rosslyn. It's the Stratford Middle School that came in wildly over budget. That was scary.
Anonymous wrote:And I hear the design proposed for the new H-B Woodlawn is $20 million over budget. That's just at the design phase. Of course it will end up even more once it's built. Somehow they'll find the money for that but not the facilities needed in S. Arl.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:19:31 here, that s exactly what happened to us. We were told that you cannot go wrong in arlington. Not true. I work with many north and south Arlington parents. With the exception of oakton and Henry, the schools are like night and day.
I hear discovery has a two story inside slide and playground. Can anyone confirm? What is the chance that will be replicated in the new south Arlington elementary school which I already hear they want to build as cheaply as possible so they can build another one in north Arlington ( even thought south Arlington needs TWO elementary schools) Sorry if I am clearly bitter, but we are second class citizens down here.
Discovery definitely has a slide inside...
Yes, I've heard the same thing about wanting to really scale back for the new south Arlington school. Certainly I think it's part of the mood of the county- street car, aquatic center, dog park, bus stop... People are furious about what they see as over spending by the county and screwy priorities. Sucks that it seems the line always gets drawn south of 50. Unless we are talking about subsidized housing. They are determined to push that agenda through. There will be a vote about it next month. The current board feels this is in sync with the will of most voters. They might very well be right- I don't know.
Any scaling back would be a money/budget issue. Discovery was planned and funded when APS had more money to spend. Same with the Ashlawn addition that looks beautiful.
Btw. The slide was installed last week! The building is just phenomenal. Let's hope it opens on time--looks like there is a lot of wrk left to do.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:19:31 here, that s exactly what happened to us. We were told that you cannot go wrong in arlington. Not true. I work with many north and south Arlington parents. With the exception of oakton and Henry, the schools are like night and day.
I hear discovery has a two story inside slide and playground. Can anyone confirm? What is the chance that will be replicated in the new south Arlington elementary school which I already hear they want to build as cheaply as possible so they can build another one in north Arlington ( even thought south Arlington needs TWO elementary schools) Sorry if I am clearly bitter, but we are second class citizens down here.
Discovery definitely has a slide inside...
Yes, I've heard the same thing about wanting to really scale back for the new south Arlington school. Certainly I think it's part of the mood of the county- street car, aquatic center, dog park, bus stop... People are furious about what they see as over spending by the county and screwy priorities. Sucks that it seems the line always gets drawn south of 50. Unless we are talking about subsidized housing. They are determined to push that agenda through. There will be a vote about it next month. The current board feels this is in sync with the will of most voters. They might very well be right- I don't know.
Anonymous wrote:19:31 here, that s exactly what happened to us. We were told that you cannot go wrong in arlington. Not true. I work with many north and south Arlington parents. With the exception of oakton and Henry, the schools are like night and day.
I hear discovery has a two story inside slide and playground. Can anyone confirm? What is the chance that will be replicated in the new south Arlington elementary school which I already hear they want to build as cheaply as possible so they can build another one in north Arlington ( even thought south Arlington needs TWO elementary schools) Sorry if I am clearly bitter, but we are second class citizens down here.
Anonymous wrote:Hello Barcroft neighbor. Your children will not really have any "choice" school options. ATS has only a few slots a year. Barcroft no longer has enough seats for any more than siblings and a couple people off the wait list. This year some parents managed to get transferred to Key, discovery and Jamestown because the south Arlington school situation is unacceptable. But that won't last. Campbell is almost as poor as Barcroft.
barcroft is not a bad school, but it is not a good one either. Almost 70 percent of the school is poor. So, it is not a racial issue, although most but not all of those kids are Latino. They are from poorer families and carry all the baggage being poor carries in arlington. So, your child's teachers will be working to get them to learn despite their lack of home resources. If your child gets into the gifted program, you are fine. If your kid has special needs, good luck. If your kid is average, your kid will be overlooked. I have heard this from most parents who are willing to be honest. And, the PTA resources are low all because the poorer parents do not get involved and they certainly don't have money to spare. The lack of PTA support is STARK in comparison to weathier north arlington schools.
That said, if your children are racial minorities, they would stand out in many north Arlington schools that are overwhelmingly white. That is not good either.
Test scores were up for some of the poorer kids in many south arlington schools. But, there has been huge pressure to get them up. And, for the first time this year kids can retake them! So, the scores cannot be compared to prior years. No one is talking about that. White kids scored worse in many south arlington scools, Barcroft in particular. So, what does that tell you? Not everything, but something and the lower scores were across the board.
If you want to get involved in this county's push to make south Arlington home to every poorer family in the county, there are folks trying to stop it. There is a group trying to stop all affordable housing as a totally unrealistic use of scarce county funds. Another group mentioned earlier, card I believe, that seems to support affordable housing as long as it is dispersed around the county (like real diversity). And by the way, it the affordable housing that makes schools like Barcroft poor despite the wealth of the two neighborhoods that feed into it (alcova heights and Barcroft).
In case you care about my kids. I sent them to Barcroft and pulled them out after a year. There was little learning going on, only catch up and discipline. They go to a private school and are thriving. I weighed moving versus private. Our house is custom and no one wanted to move. I moved here from another area and did not do my school research.