Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:But now these families are advocating to shut down Tuckahoe as a neighborhood school so that they can fill Reed. There will not be enough kids to fill all four of those schools.
1. I am a Reed walker and I don't know a single family that is advocating to have Tuckahoe shut down. I have no reason to shut down another school.
2. They didn't fill Nottingham or Discovery and APS didn't have a problem with that. If there are extra seats, they just move Montessori or pre-K programs like they did for Jamestown.
Anonymous wrote:Here's the APS walk zone map-- this shows the kids who actually live in the 1 mile walk zone for each building, not where kids are actually zoned today. The elementary walk zone project is trying to determine the maximum number of kids who can realistically walk to each building.
https://www.apsva.us/wp-content/uploads/2018/02/WZ_Buffer_StuCount_PP.jpg
ATS is actually in a pretty "unwalkable" location unless they add a crossing guard to Wilson and/or George Mason. However, APS really needs more neighborhood seats around the ASF/Key locations. There is no way that you could put the immersion program in the Tuckahoe and Nottingham buildings and attract a sufficient # of native Spanish speakers. But you could move the Key program to the ATS building and then move the ATS program to the Tuckahoe or Nottingham building.
Bottom line is that once Reed opens, they will have too many seats in those overlapping Tuckahoe-Nottingham-Discovery zones--- and they still haven't done anything to solve the neighborhood seat shortages in the Taylor-ASF-Key area. That's the main problem this effort needs to solve.
Why they didn't do this analysis before they built Discovery is beyond my comprehension...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:9:17 - to piggyback, the option schools that exist don't want to move into the upper northwest corner of Arlington because that would move them further away from the kids in South Arlington who really benefit from these programs. I'm an ATS parent and PTA board member, and a fair amount of discussion recently has revolved around resisting proposals to move us (further North) because it would be an additional barrier to lower-income kids' parents. (yes, we bus, but many/most working parents need to pick up from extended day.)
Tuckahoe really is that far North...why is it always about the South Arlington families having choices? If you decided to live in SA you might end up at a neighborhood school. Deal with it, the North should have options as well.
Oh right, because us S. Arlingtonians are so set when it comes to our neighborhood schools. Why is it a zero sum game or a competition? We are one county.
You are the worst kind of liberal - the SA parent who choices out. If you live next to the poors send your kids to school with them. At least North Arlington parents aren't fake like you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:9:17 - to piggyback, the option schools that exist don't want to move into the upper northwest corner of Arlington because that would move them further away from the kids in South Arlington who really benefit from these programs. I'm an ATS parent and PTA board member, and a fair amount of discussion recently has revolved around resisting proposals to move us (further North) because it would be an additional barrier to lower-income kids' parents. (yes, we bus, but many/most working parents need to pick up from extended day.)
Tuckahoe really is that far North...why is it always about the South Arlington families having choices? If you decided to live in SA you might end up at a neighborhood school. Deal with it, the North should have options as well.
Oh right, because us S. Arlingtonians are so set when it comes to our neighborhood schools. Why is it a zero sum game or a competition? We are one county.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:9:17 - to piggyback, the option schools that exist don't want to move into the upper northwest corner of Arlington because that would move them further away from the kids in South Arlington who really benefit from these programs. I'm an ATS parent and PTA board member, and a fair amount of discussion recently has revolved around resisting proposals to move us (further North) because it would be an additional barrier to lower-income kids' parents. (yes, we bus, but many/most working parents need to pick up from extended day.)
Tuckahoe really is that far North...why is it always about the South Arlington families having choices? If you decided to live in SA you might end up at a neighborhood school. Deal with it, the North should have options as well.
Anonymous wrote:9:17 - to piggyback, the option schools that exist don't want to move into the upper northwest corner of Arlington because that would move them further away from the kids in South Arlington who really benefit from these programs. I'm an ATS parent and PTA board member, and a fair amount of discussion recently has revolved around resisting proposals to move us (further North) because it would be an additional barrier to lower-income kids' parents. (yes, we bus, but many/most working parents need to pick up from extended day.)
Anonymous wrote:9:17 - to piggyback, the option schools that exist don't want to move into the upper northwest corner of Arlington because that would move them further away from the kids in South Arlington who really benefit from these programs. I'm an ATS parent and PTA board member, and a fair amount of discussion recently has revolved around resisting proposals to move us (further North) because it would be an additional barrier to lower-income kids' parents. (yes, we bus, but many/most working parents need to pick up from extended day.)
Anonymous wrote:But now these families are advocating to shut down Tuckahoe as a neighborhood school so that they can fill Reed. There will not be enough kids to fill all four of those schools.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:But now these families are advocating to shut down Tuckahoe as a neighborhood school so that they can fill Reed. There will not be enough kids to fill all four of those schools.
1. I am a Reed walker and I don't know a single family that is advocating to have Tuckahoe shut down. I have no reason to shut down another school.
2. They didn't fill Nottingham or Discovery and APS didn't have a problem with that. If there are extra seats, they just move Montessori or pre-K programs like they did for Jamestown.
Anonymous wrote:But now these families are advocating to shut down Tuckahoe as a neighborhood school so that they can fill Reed. There will not be enough kids to fill all four of those schools.
Anonymous wrote:Now that I see the zones for Reed, McKinley, Tuckahoe and Nottingham, I realize this will be a mess! Schools are too close. Can’t believe we will spend more than $50M to tear down the structure that was renovated in 2009 for $22M.