Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:the data I find is dated but here it is: http://schoolprofiles.fcps.edu/schlprfl/f?p=108:109:6449408519455::NO:0_CURRENT_SCHOOL_ID,P0_EDSL:070,0 it's in a pdf file.
Look at the Mobility Report - pg. 15 shows the R2 intra-county transfers by HS (16 for Madison and 15 for Marshall in 2014-15). So, the 100 transfers for each of Madison and Marshall reported earlier must be the total for four years (i.e.~25/yr). The source and destination schools are not reported in this Report. It reports a total of 582 students making intra-county transfers (presumably equivalent to pupil placements) in 2014-15.
Interesting that Robinson's mobility rate is among the lowest in the county (second only to Langley and TJ).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:the data I find is dated but here it is: http://schoolprofiles.fcps.edu/schlprfl/f?p=108:109:6449408519455::NO:0_CURRENT_SCHOOL_ID,P0_EDSL:070,0 it's in a pdf file.
Look at the Mobility Report - pg. 15 shows the R2 intra-county transfers by HS (16 for Madison and 15 for Marshall in 2014-15). So, the 100 transfers for each of Madison and Marshall reported earlier must be the total for four years (i.e.~25/yr). The source and destination schools are not reported in this Report. It reports a total of 582 students making intra-county transfers (presumably equivalent to pupil placements) in 2014-15.
Interesting that Robinson's mobility rate is among the lowest in the county (second only to Langley and TJ).
The lowest-FARMS schools are all AP and a low FARMS school where FCPS tried to replace AP with IB objected.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's a conceit to think having four IB schools would make them "magnets." It's the AP schools in the higher SES areas that are truly magnets, as they attract the highest achieving students.
The only way to have an IB "magnet" is to limit admission and then require students to seek the full diploma, as at RM in MoCo. Otherwise you just have one more school that would be better served by AP.
They serve as a magnet because typically about 3-4 other high schools feed into them. This is the way Marshall High School is working now.
Yes, but on the other hand many people avoid the Marshall district entirely because it's IB. You have to consider the net effect.
Except the flip is also true. We have a preference for IB and avoided homes zoned for Madison, McLean, Woodson, etc.
There are more of the former than the latter. Prices for homes in the Madison and McLean districts (AP) are considerably higher than in the Marshall (IB) district, including in adjacent neighborhoods.
Higher because the Marshall district is IB or because it's higher-FARMS? Impossible to say.
The lowest-FARMS schools are all AP and a low FARMS school where FCPS tried to replace AP with IB objected.
Anonymous wrote:the data I find is dated but here it is: http://schoolprofiles.fcps.edu/schlprfl/f?p=108:109:6449408519455::NO:0_CURRENT_SCHOOL_ID,P0_EDSL:070,0 it's in a pdf file.
Look at the Mobility Report - pg. 15 shows the R2 intra-county transfers by HS (16 for Madison and 15 for Marshall in 2014-15). So, the 100 transfers for each of Madison and Marshall reported earlier must be the total for four years (i.e.~25/yr). The source and destination schools are not reported in this Report. It reports a total of 582 students making intra-county transfers (presumably equivalent to pupil placements) in 2014-15.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's a conceit to think having four IB schools would make them "magnets." It's the AP schools in the higher SES areas that are truly magnets, as they attract the highest achieving students.
The only way to have an IB "magnet" is to limit admission and then require students to seek the full diploma, as at RM in MoCo. Otherwise you just have one more school that would be better served by AP.
They serve as a magnet because typically about 3-4 other high schools feed into them. This is the way Marshall High School is working now.
Yes, but on the other hand many people avoid the Marshall district entirely because it's IB. You have to consider the net effect.
Except the flip is also true. We have a preference for IB and avoided homes zoned for Madison, McLean, Woodson, etc.
There are more of the former than the latter. Prices for homes in the Madison and McLean districts (AP) are considerably higher than in the Marshall (IB) district, including in adjacent neighborhoods.
Higher because the Marshall district is IB or because it's higher-FARMS? Impossible to say.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:the data I find is dated but here it is: http://schoolprofiles.fcps.edu/schlprfl/f?p=108:109:6449408519455::NO:0_CURRENT_SCHOOL_ID,P0_EDSL:070,0 it's in a pdf file.
Look at the Mobility Report - pg. 15 shows the R2 intra-county transfers by HS (16 for Madison and 15 for Marshall in 2014-15). So, the 100 transfers for each of Madison and Marshall reported earlier must be the total for four years (i.e.~25/yr). The source and destination schools are not reported in this Report. It reports a total of 582 students making intra-county transfers (presumably equivalent to pupil placements) in 2014-15.
It's not obvious that the mobility report numbers reflect pupil placements at all. The R2 numbers would seem to track a student who started at Marshall in September (now August) and then moved into the Madison district in December, or vice versa.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's a conceit to think having four IB schools would make them "magnets." It's the AP schools in the higher SES areas that are truly magnets, as they attract the highest achieving students.
The only way to have an IB "magnet" is to limit admission and then require students to seek the full diploma, as at RM in MoCo. Otherwise you just have one more school that would be better served by AP.
They serve as a magnet because typically about 3-4 other high schools feed into them. This is the way Marshall High School is working now.
Yes, but on the other hand many people avoid the Marshall district entirely because it's IB. You have to consider the net effect.
Except the flip is also true. We have a preference for IB and avoided homes zoned for Madison, McLean, Woodson, etc.
There are more of the former than the latter. Prices for homes in the Madison and McLean districts (AP) are considerably higher than in the Marshall (IB) district, including in adjacent neighborhoods.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's a conceit to think having four IB schools would make them "magnets." It's the AP schools in the higher SES areas that are truly magnets, as they attract the highest achieving students.
The only way to have an IB "magnet" is to limit admission and then require students to seek the full diploma, as at RM in MoCo. Otherwise you just have one more school that would be better served by AP.
They serve as a magnet because typically about 3-4 other high schools feed into them. This is the way Marshall High School is working now.
Yes, but on the other hand many people avoid the Marshall district entirely because it's IB. You have to consider the net effect.
Except the flip is also true. We have a preference for IB and avoided homes zoned for Madison, McLean, Woodson, etc.
There are more of the former than the latter. Prices for homes in the Madison and McLean districts (AP) are considerably higher than in the Marshall (IB) district, including in adjacent neighborhoods.
Anonymous wrote:the data I find is dated but here it is: http://schoolprofiles.fcps.edu/schlprfl/f?p=108:109:6449408519455::NO:0_CURRENT_SCHOOL_ID,P0_EDSL:070,0 it's in a pdf file.
Look at the Mobility Report - pg. 15 shows the R2 intra-county transfers by HS (16 for Madison and 15 for Marshall in 2014-15). So, the 100 transfers for each of Madison and Marshall reported earlier must be the total for four years (i.e.~25/yr). The source and destination schools are not reported in this Report. It reports a total of 582 students making intra-county transfers (presumably equivalent to pupil placements) in 2014-15.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's a conceit to think having four IB schools would make them "magnets." It's the AP schools in the higher SES areas that are truly magnets, as they attract the highest achieving students.
The only way to have an IB "magnet" is to limit admission and then require students to seek the full diploma, as at RM in MoCo. Otherwise you just have one more school that would be better served by AP.
They serve as a magnet because typically about 3-4 other high schools feed into them. This is the way Marshall High School is working now.
Yes, but on the other hand many people avoid the Marshall district entirely because it's IB. You have to consider the net effect.
Except the flip is also true. We have a preference for IB and avoided homes zoned for Madison, McLean, Woodson, etc.
0_CURRENT_SCHOOL_ID,P0_EDSL:070,0 it's in a pdf file.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's a conceit to think having four IB schools would make them "magnets." It's the AP schools in the higher SES areas that are truly magnets, as they attract the highest achieving students.
The only way to have an IB "magnet" is to limit admission and then require students to seek the full diploma, as at RM in MoCo. Otherwise you just have one more school that would be better served by AP.
They serve as a magnet because typically about 3-4 other high schools feed into them. This is the way Marshall High School is working now.
Yes, but on the other hand many people avoid the Marshall district entirely because it's IB. You have to consider the net effect.
Anonymous wrote:Actually, according to the Madison principal, Madison (the stronger school) caps the number of pupil placements it will accept to roughly equal the number of students transferring out for IB. Otherwise, it would get additional pupil placements from Marshall and South Lakes, and the school is already full. I heard some other AP schools are even more restrictive now on allowing pupil placements from IB schools.