Anonymous wrote:No one thinks the teachers at Randolph/Barcroft/Carlin Springs are anything but terrific. Probably better than the ones elsewhere in Arlington because they have the toughest jobs. What gets me about Katie is that she thinks the SITUATION at those S. Arlington schools is fine and that we should just pack more poor kids into them by maximizing affordable housing along the Pike instead of spreading it elsewhere. A "diverse" Arlington means an Arlington with all the poor people in the South; not an Arlington where diverse students learn from each other and attend the same schools. Also, she advocates for charter schools (imagine what that would do to the most troubled S. Arlington schools). The point is the learning environment is not the same as the rest of Arlington and only someone with a condescending view of what constitutes opportunity for poor kids could argue otherwise.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It'd be 30%. That is the free and reduced lunch rate for all of Arlington. But a lot of us (N. and S.) would just like to see it balanced a bit so there is not 70-80% at Carlin Springs/Randolph and 2% at Jamestown/Nottingham. How about 50-60% and 15-20%?
That would definitely be much more banlanced and diverse for these schools. Of course I should have just considered the overall rates. Duh.
30 % is a lot, but that seems like a number we can absorb. I am concerned that the new plan will add to that. When we start to approach 40/50 % as a county- that seems untenable.
To get an idea of what 30% looks like, look at Long Branch and Oakridge. These two are closest to the county average of 30% FARMS -- 31% at Oakridge, 33% at Long Branch. Both have good test scores overall (both are 8 on Greatschools). My kids are at Long Branch and it's been a great community. I've been very happy with how my kids have been challenged and the various enrichment opportunities they have. It doesn't feel like poverty/ESL related issues are taking too much time. We have friends at Oakridge who are similarly pleased with their experience there.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It'd be 30%. That is the free and reduced lunch rate for all of Arlington. But a lot of us (N. and S.) would just like to see it balanced a bit so there is not 70-80% at Carlin Springs/Randolph and 2% at Jamestown/Nottingham. How about 50-60% and 15-20%?
That would definitely be much more banlanced and diverse for these schools. Of course I should have just considered the overall rates. Duh.
30 % is a lot, but that seems like a number we can absorb. I am concerned that the new plan will add to that. When we start to approach 40/50 % as a county- that seems untenable.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Dorsey is from south arlington and his kids are or went to south arlington schools.
Cristol is totally fine with concentrating all the affordable housing on the pike. She also thinks it is perfectly fine to have schools with 70% farms. She does not think SOL scores mean much because each student is different and arlington has great teachers.
How do I know? I asked her at a meeting. There is. I question and her answer to me was very clear. She may try to soften it now that people like me have challenged her position. She talks the talk, but when asked specific questions she would not change the lack of diversity in our schools. She is very close to Mary Hynes and advised the board on what questions t ask the school board in that ridiculous affordablehousing housing plan. The questions were written to support the plan. Period.
If you want to continue shoving the poorer people in arlington in south Arlington, vote Cristol. If you don't, vote McMenamin and Dorsey.
I find this hard to believe. I work at Randolph Elementary, where I know Katie as a volunteer. She also lives in South Arlington and has volunteered at an elementary school for years despite not having any kids there. I know that isn't what I was doing with my free time when I was 25.
I believe that Katie may have defended the quality of the school or the excellence of our students at Randolph and elsewhere in South Arlington, so maybe you misinterpreted her saying that she was proud of our school as saying that she doesn't care about the students there. And by the way, SOL scores do Not tel you everything about a student, and we Do have great teachers here.
Anonymous wrote:Dorsey is from south arlington and his kids are or went to south arlington schools.
Cristol is totally fine with concentrating all the affordable housing on the pike. She also thinks it is perfectly fine to have schools with 70% farms. She does not think SOL scores mean much because each student is different and arlington has great teachers.
How do I know? I asked her at a meeting. There is. I question and her answer to me was very clear. She may try to soften it now that people like me have challenged her position. She talks the talk, but when asked specific questions she would not change the lack of diversity in our schools. She is very close to Mary Hynes and advised the board on what questions t ask the school board in that ridiculous affordablehousing housing plan. The questions were written to support the plan. Period.
If you want to continue shoving the poorer people in arlington in south Arlington, vote Cristol. If you don't, vote McMenamin and Dorsey.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It'd be 30%. That is the free and reduced lunch rate for all of Arlington. But a lot of us (N. and S.) would just like to see it balanced a bit so there is not 70-80% at Carlin Springs/Randolph and 2% at Jamestown/Nottingham. How about 50-60% and 15-20%?
That would definitely be much more banlanced and diverse for these schools. Of course I should have just considered the overall rates. Duh.
30 % is a lot, but that seems like a number we can absorb. I am concerned that the new plan will add to that. When we start to approach 40/50 % as a county- that seems untenable.
Anonymous wrote:It'd be 30%. That is the free and reduced lunch rate for all of Arlington. But a lot of us (N. and S.) would just like to see it balanced a bit so there is not 70-80% at Carlin Springs/Randolph and 2% at Jamestown/Nottingham. How about 50-60% and 15-20%?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Oh, what he said was troubling. I think what Cristol said was worse.
But he really wants her to be elected with him... doesn't that mean, that he basically agrees with her on most things?!
He has to say that. They both have to keep ACDC support behind them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's not that the education isn't equal, in the sense that the facilities and the resources and the quality of the teachers is the same in all schools across Arlington. What's different is--what the teachers have to spend time in class focusing on, what kinds of opportunities the kids have (funding for after school activities, parent support for various clubs, etc.), what the general tenor of the school is. My kids go to schools in south Arlington and the stuff that we get from the schools and the stuff the parents talk about is different from north Arlington schools. We get flyers about sending in food for backpacks for kids who would otherwise go hungry on the weekends. Other schools send home flyers about enrichment activities and academic competitions. The focus at our middle school seems to be on getting kids to pass and stay in school through high school graduation--it emphasizes "career" readiness as much as "college" readiness. If I have a kid who I want to go to college, he is missing out somewhat by not being immersed in a culture where college is the expectation. We just don't hear about certain opportunities, because the teachers and the other parents don't know about them or don't focus on them. If the schools were less segregated economically, you wouldn't have this kind of divide, but the board is unwilling to implement more choice schools or drastically redraw the boundaries to get this kind of change.
Anonymous wrote:10:48 gets it. Have had kids in schools north & south. Speaking only for my middle class kids (And my family was not afraid of the 50% ++ FARMS school that we attended for 5 years), the difference in the learning environment & opportunities in class & out are night & day. It's a shame that VOICE & Mary Hynes don't want to pursue that for less affluent kids. They will at least get adequate schools though. And that seems To be all the VOICE advocates in S. Arl want.
I think you two are right on the money.
It is NOT that the schools themselves or the teachers are different at all, it is the environment, the feel of the school, expectations, and activities offered through the PTA ....
And that stems solely from an unequal and disproportionate socioeconomic distribution at the respective schools.
IF there was a more even distribution, I think it would lift all the schools, without causing any negatives in the highest SES schools.
I would be interested in more concrete examples from the PP who had kids in schools in different (neighborhood?) schools in Arlington! And I'd like to hear from that PP, if your experiences were in elementary school, vs. middle and high school (if applicable). Thanks!
Regardless, overcrowding is a serious issue in ALL of Arlington, at every school level, and any "Affordable Housing plan" that aims to add thousands and thousands of new kids that need assistance into the county is unconscionable at this point.
Not wanting to start a fight, but if these kids are already in the DC region or are predictably going to be here, they need someplace to live, don't they? I have kids in Arlington schools and the overcrowding and poverty concentration concern me, but at a fundamental human level I find it very hard to just slam the door shut and say there's no room for anyone else. How is it any different than Europe squabbling over whether to allow refugees across their borders? Nobody really has enough room, do they? Schools matter, but so does basic human dignity, right?