Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If your child needs special education services, I recommend avoiding Vienna Elementary. Evaluation and eligibility is very challenging to get at that school, lots of barriers to get your foot in the door for special ed. Once you have an IEP, it's also difficult to get the services that are necessary. If your child is neurotypical and doesn't difficulties, then the school is fine.
You’ve described any ES ever in FCPS.
With the caveat that my experience is of course anecdotal we found our elementary - Freedom Hill - was proactive in identifying our child for a 504 and offering accommodations. There's another kid in the grade level with some obvious special needs and that child seems to be very well accommodated.
And a friend of mine that has a kid at another FCPS school has a child with extensive special needs and she said FCPS was much easier and much more proactive and accommodating than Arlington had been.
We had ruled out Freedom Hill because of the abuse of non-verbal kids there. It seemed like there were an awful lot of adults who were involved. The criminal prosecutions are ongoing I believe.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If your child needs special education services, I recommend avoiding Vienna Elementary. Evaluation and eligibility is very challenging to get at that school, lots of barriers to get your foot in the door for special ed. Once you have an IEP, it's also difficult to get the services that are necessary. If your child is neurotypical and doesn't difficulties, then the school is fine.
You’ve described any ES ever in FCPS.
With the caveat that my experience is of course anecdotal we found our elementary - Freedom Hill - was proactive in identifying our child for a 504 and offering accommodations. There's another kid in the grade level with some obvious special needs and that child seems to be very well accommodated.
And a friend of mine that has a kid at another FCPS school has a child with extensive special needs and she said FCPS was much easier and much more proactive and accommodating than Arlington had been.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Haycock - weak administration, horrible special ed department, parent community (trickles down to kids)
& can't keep a principal.
I suspect because the parents are who essentially picks the principal. They inevitably pick one they know they manipulate who burns out quick.
Yeah, no. A principal is picked by FCPS administration at the regional level. Sometimes parents and School Board members have some limited input.
Principal J was drummed out mostly due to his proposed changes to AAP.
. . .
He wanted to water it down, with (I strongly suspect) an eventual goal of eliminating it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wolftrap - management decisions are heavily influenced by the PTA. Good or bad depending on whether you’re on it. PTA members fill up all the volunteering slots for every activity before they send the signupgenius to others.
God, this happens at our school too. In fact, this happens with field trips. The teacher sends it to room moms first who take all the slots. Can’t stand it.
Anonymous wrote:Olde Creek- too small, bad with special Ed services, lackluster administration but really too small.
Anonymous wrote:Wolftrap - management decisions are heavily influenced by the PTA. Good or bad depending on whether you’re on it. PTA members fill up all the volunteering slots for every activity before they send the signupgenius to others.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Virginia Run principal is nuts.
Neighborhood is great at least though!
She's not that bad. Virginia Run is a good school.
Our teachers have always been wonderful. No love for the principal here though. I'd correct PP to say the school is not bad (even if the Principal is). It definitely is a good school.
Anonymous wrote:Wolftrap - management decisions are heavily influenced by the PTA. Good or bad depending on whether you’re on it. PTA members fill up all the volunteering slots for every activity before they send the signupgenius to others.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If your child needs special education services, I recommend avoiding Vienna Elementary. Evaluation and eligibility is very challenging to get at that school, lots of barriers to get your foot in the door for special ed. Once you have an IEP, it's also difficult to get the services that are necessary. If your child is neurotypical and doesn't difficulties, then the school is fine.
You’ve described any ES ever in FCPS.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Belvedere Elementary. Lackluster academics. IB is a joke. Untrustworthy admin.
Belvedere's test scores are spectacular given the large Hispanic population and large FARMs population. It is extremely rare to see a school have such high scores with that type of diverse population. We have people here on DCUM claiming that schools like Sangster ES are closing the achievement gap![]()
Belvedere staff are truly working miracles because no other low-SES, high-FARMs school shows such results. Something great must be happening in the classroom despite the untrustworthy admin you've encountered.
A ton of other ES send their AAP kids to Belvedere. It’s a lot like Springfield Estates used to be. No miracles.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If your child needs special education services, I recommend avoiding Vienna Elementary. Evaluation and eligibility is very challenging to get at that school, lots of barriers to get your foot in the door for special ed. Once you have an IEP, it's also difficult to get the services that are necessary. If your child is neurotypical and doesn't difficulties, then the school is fine.
You’ve described any ES ever in FCPS.
Anonymous wrote:If your child needs special education services, I recommend avoiding Vienna Elementary. Evaluation and eligibility is very challenging to get at that school, lots of barriers to get your foot in the door for special ed. Once you have an IEP, it's also difficult to get the services that are necessary. If your child is neurotypical and doesn't difficulties, then the school is fine.