Anonymous wrote:Take for example our center school. Has 4 aap teachers in 5th grade. There are 6 schools that feed into the center. If the aap kids are sent back to the base schools, how many additional teachers do you need? Also, the center school will need to retain a teacher.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
As for center teachers if centers are eliminated, they could then be plugged into the base schools for LLIV. No additional training needed.
Correct.
In addition, there are MANY AAP/gifted education-endorsed teachers who do not teach AAP, so the "pool" of qualified teachers is adequate.For example, at my school, we had approximately half a dozen AAP/GT-endorsed teachers before we even had AAP in our school.
+1. Some AAP parents make it sound like training teachers to educate their snowflakes is more rigorous than a NASA training program. It really is not that big a deal.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
As for center teachers if centers are eliminated, they could then be plugged into the base schools for LLIV. No additional training needed.
Correct.
In addition, there are MANY AAP/gifted education-endorsed teachers who do not teach AAP, so the "pool" of qualified teachers is adequate.For example, at my school, we had approximately half a dozen AAP/GT-endorsed teachers before we even had AAP in our school.
+1. Some AAP parents make it sound like training teachers to educate their snowflakes is more rigorous than a NASA training program. It really is not that big a deal.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
As for center teachers if centers are eliminated, they could then be plugged into the base schools for LLIV. No additional training needed.
Correct.
In addition, there are MANY AAP/gifted education-endorsed teachers who do not teach AAP, so the "pool" of qualified teachers is adequate.For example, at my school, we had approximately half a dozen AAP/GT-endorsed teachers before we even had AAP in our school.
Anonymous wrote:
As for center teachers if centers are eliminated, they could then be plugged into the base schools for LLIV. No additional training needed.
For example, at my school, we had approximately half a dozen AAP/GT-endorsed teachers before we even had AAP in our school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:but don't forget, many kids returning to their base schools no longer need buses. they're close enough to walk -- which again speaks to the absurdity of bloated centers.
But don't forget, many kids returning to their base school will need buses... mine would. Our school has been deemed "unwalkable" because of the busy street outside, so everybody gets a bus, and bringing the Center kids back would mean another bus, because ours are full. You can't generalize. There will be costs to eliminating Centers.
FCAG has told its members that the "savings" from eliminating busing & Centers did not include the costs of transporting Center kids to their base schools, nor did it take into account the additional training that would be needed to eliminate Centers entirely and give every school a LLIV program. So those numbers on the Budget Task Force "tool" are inflated. We can argue about how inflated... but they're inflated.
Of course FCAG has fed its members this B.S. Sorry, but these are all ridiculous stalling tactics, at best. The kids who currently attend centers all have base schools assigned to them, including buses that already transport their neighbors to said base school. Eliminating centers would then free up the buses that have been used to transport these kids many miles past their base schools to the centers; these buses could then be put back to use transporting all kids to base schools. It's far simpler than the current wasteful and convoluted routes used to carry a handful of center kids on each bus to the center.
As for center teachers if centers are eliminated, they could then be plugged into the base schools for LLIV. No additional training needed. Honestly, it's as if you people and your hot housed kids can't possibly adapt to life in the real world.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:but don't forget, many kids returning to their base schools no longer need buses. they're close enough to walk -- which again speaks to the absurdity of bloated centers.
But don't forget, many kids returning to their base school will need buses... mine would. Our school has been deemed "unwalkable" because of the busy street outside, so everybody gets a bus, and bringing the Center kids back would mean another bus, because ours are full. You can't generalize. There will be costs to eliminating Centers.
FCAG has told its members that the "savings" from eliminating busing & Centers did not include the costs of transporting Center kids to their base schools, nor did it take into account the additional training that would be needed to eliminate Centers entirely and give every school a LLIV program. So those numbers on the Budget Task Force "tool" are inflated. We can argue about how inflated... but they're inflated.
Anonymous wrote:but don't forget, many kids returning to their base schools no longer need buses. they're close enough to walk -- which again speaks to the absurdity of bloated centers.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:^^^If student capacity increases, buses may very well need to be added to existing routes!
+1
The buses are already full now.
Not in our neighborhood. Plenty of room for the center kids to return to their own base school.
Good for you! Hardly any room on the buses now in our neighborhood.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:^^^If student capacity increases, buses may very well need to be added to existing routes!
+1
The buses are already full now.
Not in our neighborhood. Plenty of room for the center kids to return to their own base school.
Good for you! Hardly any room on the buses now in our neighborhood.
but don't forget, many kids returning to their base schools no longer need buses. they're close enough to walk -- which again speaks to the absurdity of bloated centers.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:^^^If student capacity increases, buses may very well need to be added to existing routes!
+1
The buses are already full now.
Not in our neighborhood. Plenty of room for the center kids to return to their own base school.
Good for you! Hardly any room on the buses now in our neighborhood.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:^^^If student capacity increases, buses may very well need to be added to existing routes!
+1
The buses are already full now.
Not in our neighborhood. Plenty of room for the center kids to return to their own base school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you'd truly read this entire thread, you would have seen the multiple posts by people trying to label AAP a special needs program. I'm not "looking for an easy gotcha" at all. But I will absolutely correct those who insist on making AAP out to be something it's not. As for you - you're exhausting.
Just doing my part to clear out some of clutter. If you're still responding to something someone said pages back it's no wonder you're exhausted. And if you want to continue, do us a favor and indicate to whom you are responding, otherwise you look like a crazy person talking to yourself.
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