Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It sounds like you are going down the path to private school. It kills me to be paying for private school, but by the time FCPS gets done paying and staffing everything else that they do, from AAP to ESOL, the 'average' student just doesn't get that much from FCPS. Took me through ES to figure that out - I regret every minute my kids were in FCPS.
Op here. I was just talking to DH about private school. Don't think Mclean will be any better for my child. We will see how things go. I feel we will be visiting Burgundy, Browne and SSSA.
Be careful, I know families at Burgundy and Browne who left for FCPS. Some even had similar complaints but they were upset because they were paying for their kids to be ignored. Others had different complaints unique to private school, like their child not being challaneged and the focus being more on social skills than education. I am not familiar with SSSA. Go to the DCUM private school board and ask around, you may be surprised. I'm not saying don't do private. I'm saying Browne and Burgandy may not be the right ones for your issue.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My 7yo DS is a nice kid, doesn't cause any problems and listens to the teacher. DS's FCPS Alexandria school is 30% free lunch/ESOL. He has 27 kids in his class. DS is a bright kid but probably not gifted. I feel like he is completely ignored in his class. I don't know if this is unique to his class or school or if it will be the same everywhere for a well behaved non-troublemaker who isn't profoundly gifted.
I don't know if things will change if we move to Arlington or Mclean, deemed better schools. I would like to move to Arlington for closer proximity to work and smaller class sizes. Mclean has nicer curb appeal but I believe class sizes are even bigger.
Be glad he's being ignored. It's way better than the alternatives, trust me. In FCPS, ignored is about the best you can hope for, unless your child is one of the "gifted and privileged" and gets an actual education.
OP here. I just reread your post three times. Are you saying that only the gifted kids in FCPS get a good education?
I'm not the PP, but I had two boys go through FCPS through Middle School. One was in AAP, the other Gen Ed. The AAP was school based, not center, so those in the know would look down upon it. Anyway, the difference was night and day. AAP was very challenging and engaging, Gen Ed looked more like busy work. AAP had piles of HW, Gen Ed not very much. It was like they were in two different schools. If you child is tracked for Gen Ed, I think private is a much better option.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I feel exactly the same way. My kid isn't a special needs kid or a troublemaker, nor is he "greatly gifted", and therefore he is basically ignored. Any extra enrichment he gets is provided by me.
Changing schools won't help you -- my son is already in a very good school. It is just the nature of a giant school system.
Yup. And again, OP should be happy that her kid is not having any problems rather than looking for them. When I was in 1st grade at a catholic school I had 50 kids in my first grade class. I still remember one day when everyone was talking and the sister made us all stand up, and then allowed me to sit down since I was smart and always got my work done. I would make up for it later in elementary by causing plenty of problems and grabbing plenty of teacher attention. Ultimately, I would get 2 graduate degrees from an Ivy and top ten school and go on to have a successful career and a meaningful life.
It all balances out. Despite all the hysteria about our "gifted" kids getting lost and held back, the brightest do manage to succeed.
OP here. I don't think my child is gifted. I'm afraid he is not learning at his potential and is basically ignored since he causes no trouble.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My 7yo DS is a nice kid, doesn't cause any problems and listens to the teacher. DS's FCPS Alexandria school is 30% free lunch/ESOL. He has 27 kids in his class. DS is a bright kid but probably not gifted. I feel like he is completely ignored in his class. I don't know if this is unique to his class or school or if it will be the same everywhere for a well behaved non-troublemaker who isn't profoundly gifted.
I don't know if things will change if we move to Arlington or Mclean, deemed better schools. I would like to move to Arlington for closer proximity to work and smaller class sizes. Mclean has nicer curb appeal but I believe class sizes are even bigger.
Be glad he's being ignored. It's way better than the alternatives, trust me. In FCPS, ignored is about the best you can hope for, unless your child is one of the "gifted and privileged" and gets an actual education.
OP here. I just reread your post three times. Are you saying that only the gifted kids in FCPS get a good education?
AAP kids get something better than everyone else. They get a private school quality education for free, while the rest of the kids sit around in over-crowded classrooms learning next to nothing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My 7yo DS is a nice kid, doesn't cause any problems and listens to the teacher. DS's FCPS Alexandria school is 30% free lunch/ESOL. He has 27 kids in his class. DS is a bright kid but probably not gifted. I feel like he is completely ignored in his class. I don't know if this is unique to his class or school or if it will be the same everywhere for a well behaved non-troublemaker who isn't profoundly gifted.
I don't know if things will change if we move to Arlington or Mclean, deemed better schools. I would like to move to Arlington for closer proximity to work and smaller class sizes. Mclean has nicer curb appeal but I believe class sizes are even bigger.
Be glad he's being ignored. It's way better than the alternatives, trust me. In FCPS, ignored is about the best you can hope for, unless your child is one of the "gifted and privileged" and gets an actual education.
OP here. I just reread your post three times. Are you saying that only the gifted kids in FCPS get a good education?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I kinda wonder if the same problem won't occur at a private school. Are they also set up to provide lots of help to the "gifted" and not much to the "bright regular" types?
My kid is in private and we prefer it. Here's how it works. Prospects are screened, if you have a history of not cooperating in class (outside of academic performance) based on teacher recommendations then you maybe dropped as a candidate. If you do get in and they find out you're trouble the kick you out. So my kids is able to get as much as they willing to without the usual distractions. And it's not FARMS that creates an unlearning environment. I saw issues in my mostly non farms classroom. Public school teachers all around spend a lot of their time managing snowflakes and their parents. Schools cannot teach your kid everything academic they need to know these days, that's your responsibility.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It sounds like you are going down the path to private school. It kills me to be paying for private school, but by the time FCPS gets done paying and staffing everything else that they do, from AAP to ESOL, the 'average' student just doesn't get that much from FCPS. Took me through ES to figure that out - I regret every minute my kids were in FCPS.
Op here. I was just talking to DH about private school. Don't think Mclean will be any better for my child. We will see how things go. I feel we will be visiting Burgundy, Browne and SSSA.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My 7yo DS is a nice kid, doesn't cause any problems and listens to the teacher. DS's FCPS Alexandria school is 30% free lunch/ESOL. He has 27 kids in his class. DS is a bright kid but probably not gifted. I feel like he is completely ignored in his class. I don't know if this is unique to his class or school or if it will be the same everywhere for a well behaved non-troublemaker who isn't profoundly gifted.
I don't know if things will change if we move to Arlington or Mclean, deemed better schools. I would like to move to Arlington for closer proximity to work and smaller class sizes. Mclean has nicer curb appeal but I believe class sizes are even bigger.
Be glad he's being ignored. It's way better than the alternatives, trust me. In FCPS, ignored is about the best you can hope for, unless your child is one of the "gifted and privileged" and gets an actual education.
OP here. I just reread your post three times. Are you saying that only the gifted kids in FCPS get a good education?
I'm not the PP, but I had two boys go through FCPS through Middle School. One was in AAP, the other Gen Ed. The AAP was school based, not center, so those in the know would look down upon it. Anyway, the difference was night and day. AAP was very challenging and engaging, Gen Ed looked more like busy work. AAP had piles of HW, Gen Ed not very much. It was like they were in two different schools. If you child is tracked for Gen Ed, I think private is a much better option.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My 7yo DS is a nice kid, doesn't cause any problems and listens to the teacher. DS's FCPS Alexandria school is 30% free lunch/ESOL. He has 27 kids in his class. DS is a bright kid but probably not gifted. I feel like he is completely ignored in his class. I don't know if this is unique to his class or school or if it will be the same everywhere for a well behaved non-troublemaker who isn't profoundly gifted.
I don't know if things will change if we move to Arlington or Mclean, deemed better schools. I would like to move to Arlington for closer proximity to work and smaller class sizes. Mclean has nicer curb appeal but I believe class sizes are even bigger.
Be glad he's being ignored. It's way better than the alternatives, trust me. In FCPS, ignored is about the best you can hope for, unless your child is one of the "gifted and privileged" and gets an actual education.
OP here. I just reread your post three times. Are you saying that only the gifted kids in FCPS get a good education?
I'm not the PP, but I had two boys go through FCPS through Middle School. One was in AAP, the other Gen Ed. The AAP was school based, not center, so those in the know would look down upon it. Anyway, the difference was night and day. AAP was very challenging and engaging, Gen Ed looked more like busy work. AAP had piles of HW, Gen Ed not very much. It was like they were in two different schools. If you child is tracked for Gen Ed, I think private is a much better option.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My 7yo DS is a nice kid, doesn't cause any problems and listens to the teacher. DS's FCPS Alexandria school is 30% free lunch/ESOL. He has 27 kids in his class. DS is a bright kid but probably not gifted. I feel like he is completely ignored in his class. I don't know if this is unique to his class or school or if it will be the same everywhere for a well behaved non-troublemaker who isn't profoundly gifted.
I don't know if things will change if we move to Arlington or Mclean, deemed better schools. I would like to move to Arlington for closer proximity to work and smaller class sizes. Mclean has nicer curb appeal but I believe class sizes are even bigger.
Be glad he's being ignored. It's way better than the alternatives, trust me. In FCPS, ignored is about the best you can hope for, unless your child is one of the "gifted and privileged" and gets an actual education.
OP here. I just reread your post three times. Are you saying that only the gifted kids in FCPS get a good education?