Anonymous wrote:I was born and raised in New Jersey and always find the school systems around here lacking in comparison. Not sure if its just because I idealize where I grew up though.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The OP didn't ask about which school system dealt with a large and diverse population - they asked about "best" . I went to one of those smaller rich Long Island districts, and it was leaps and bounds ahead of FCPS and APS.
Well then we need to just define "best" as...what public school district in the US has the highest concentration of wealthy/affluent and education families?
DING DING DING! We have a winner.
Who actually use their public school system.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Massachusetts, NJ, NY, CT, twin cities, suburb of Philadelphia, Milwaukee, Chicago, St. Louis...
Which suburb of Milwaukee?
Whitefish Bay is really good.
Anonymous wrote:If only TJ were it's own system!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I've lived in many places. I seriously vote for FCPS.
Then you haven't lived that many places. FCPS are very good. But nowhere near the best.
For the 10th largest school system in the country, it's pretty damn good. I've taught in 3 different states over the last 25 years, including small, wealthy communities in the northeast. Nothing comes close to the professional learning or professionalism I've seen in FCPS. Is it perfect? Of course not. But then no place is. Also, to compare it to a small school district like a Scarsdale, NY or Lexington,MA or other wealthy towns is pointless. For the volume of students, including the number of immigrants and students living in poverty, it is excellent.
School systems of similar size:
Hawaii
Orange County, FL
Hillsborough County, FL
Palm Beach County, FL
Philadelphia, PA
But that actually is the point. Because the question isn't who does the best work with a large diverse population, the question is what is the best public school district. I don't think FCPS even begins to come close to a place like Scarsdale.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The OP didn't ask about which school system dealt with a large and diverse population - they asked about "best" . I went to one of those smaller rich Long Island districts, and it was leaps and bounds ahead of FCPS and APS.
Well then we need to just define "best" as...what public school district in the US has the highest concentration of wealthy/affluent and education families?
DING DING DING! We have a winner.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The OP didn't ask about which school system dealt with a large and diverse population - they asked about "best" . I went to one of those smaller rich Long Island districts, and it was leaps and bounds ahead of FCPS and APS.
Well then we need to just define "best" as...what public school district in the US has the highest concentration of wealthy/affluent and education families?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Massachusetts
Boo. No.
Palo Alto Ca.
There are also a lot of highly ranked high schools in Texas which surpruses me.
Anonymous wrote:Massachusetts
Anonymous wrote:The OP didn't ask about which school system dealt with a large and diverse population - they asked about "best" . I went to one of those smaller rich Long Island districts, and it was leaps and bounds ahead of FCPS and APS.