Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Going back to the initial question. Have any teachers received an offer yet?
Yes. Teacher from South Lakes sent an email this morning that they've accepted a position at Skyview.
Lovely of FCPS to create a dynamic where teachers jump to avoid getting pushed. It won't just be at South Lakes.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Going back to the initial question. Have any teachers received an offer yet?
Yes. Teacher from South Lakes sent an email this morning that they've accepted a position at Skyview.
Anonymous wrote:Going back to the initial question. Have any teachers received an offer yet?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The admin at Skyview will be really good, the teachers are excited to be there, the kids are opted in for many reasons and they will be trailblazers, the school will only get bigger (opt in and opt out will be a thing of the past soon) and better (especially the facilities) EVERY year, we should celebrate this new and needed HS in FCPS.
It seems like a very expensive proposition, at least in the first year or two. No disrespect but it sounds like it’s going to be a huge misallocation of resources at first primarily to benefit a small group of non-sporty kids from Carson who didn’t think they’d fit in at Westfield or South Lakes. Hearing next to nothing about kids from Centreville, Chantilly or Oakton opting in - and it’s understandable why few from Centreville would opt in when the odds of their being in the final boundaries are so small.
I don’t understand why they aren’t taking more time and then opening this as the community school people really wanted.
It might seem surprising, but many academically advanced kids are also athletic. The families who opted in did extensive research of both Skyview and their base schools and communicated with school admins before making their decision. Perhaps it’s just that your circle doesn’t include the types of students who are opting in—risk-takers, strong leaders, academically advanced, athletic, and with engaged parents.
Anonymous wrote:To be fair, I heard three different numbers at Tuesdays meeting for 9th graders. Two people on staff said “around 700” and one person said “around 650.” One person said the issue was that the opt-in option was open until 1 March and that people have been opting in with a small number of kids opting out after opting in so the actual number is fluctuating daily. The only trend that they reall saw was that the daily optin numbers had been higher then the numbers of kids opting out.
I think the number is somewhere in between and will at that 700 mark, or higher, by the cut off date. I don’t think they will have trouble getting to 500 freshman when it opens up to those outside of the 5 pyramids. I also won’t be surprised if they get to the 500 for sophomores once they expand outside the 5 pyramids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The admin at Skyview will be really good, the teachers are excited to be there, the kids are opted in for many reasons and they will be trailblazers, the school will only get bigger (opt in and opt out will be a thing of the past soon) and better (especially the facilities) EVERY year, we should celebrate this new and needed HS in FCPS.
It seems like a very expensive proposition, at least in the first year or two. No disrespect but it sounds like it’s going to be a huge misallocation of resources at first primarily to benefit a small group of non-sporty kids from Carson who didn’t think they’d fit in at Westfield or South Lakes. Hearing next to nothing about kids from Centreville, Chantilly or Oakton opting in - and it’s understandable why few from Centreville would opt in when the odds of their being in the final boundaries are so small.
I don’t understand why they aren’t taking more time and then opening this as the community school people really wanted.
Anonymous wrote:The admin at Skyview will be really good, the teachers are excited to be there, the kids are opted in for many reasons and they will be trailblazers, the school will only get bigger (opt in and opt out will be a thing of the past soon) and better (especially the facilities) EVERY year, we should celebrate this new and needed HS in FCPS.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Emails went out that the Skyview kids will be getting Academic Counseling soon. I am hoping that we have a better idea about the class size for the 9th and 10th graders tomorrow night. I would guess that there is a higher number of 9th graders then 10th graders.
Given that taxpayers across the county are funding this new school, they really should be transparent about the number of students opting in and whether they plan to open up enrollment to students outside the designated five pyramids.
But they've boxed themselves in. If they limit enrollment to students in the five pyramids and don't get 1000 kids opting in, it demonstrates their opt-in model didn't meet expectations. If they start welcoming students from other pyramids, people will say Reid was more intent on opening a quasi-magnet than focusing on overcrowding relief at Chantilly or other schools.
I can confirm they have 500 for each grade
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Emails went out that the Skyview kids will be getting Academic Counseling soon. I am hoping that we have a better idea about the class size for the 9th and 10th graders tomorrow night. I would guess that there is a higher number of 9th graders then 10th graders.
Given that taxpayers across the county are funding this new school, they really should be transparent about the number of students opting in and whether they plan to open up enrollment to students outside the designated five pyramids.
But they've boxed themselves in. If they limit enrollment to students in the five pyramids and don't get 1000 kids opting in, it demonstrates their opt-in model didn't meet expectations. If they start welcoming students from other pyramids, people will say Reid was more intent on opening a quasi-magnet than focusing on overcrowding relief at Chantilly or other schools.
I can confirm they have 500 for each grade
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Emails went out that the Skyview kids will be getting Academic Counseling soon. I am hoping that we have a better idea about the class size for the 9th and 10th graders tomorrow night. I would guess that there is a higher number of 9th graders then 10th graders.
Given that taxpayers across the county are funding this new school, they really should be transparent about the number of students opting in and whether they plan to open up enrollment to students outside the designated five pyramids.
But they've boxed themselves in. If they limit enrollment to students in the five pyramids and don't get 1000 kids opting in, it demonstrates their opt-in model didn't meet expectations. If they start welcoming students from other pyramids, people will say Reid was more intent on opening a quasi-magnet than focusing on overcrowding relief at Chantilly or other schools.
I can confirm they have 500 for each grade
Interesting, I heard 650 total but no breakdown on the 9th vs 10th grade. The email sent out to my student mentioned that they had spots and that students outside of the 5 HS could apply to attend but it did not mention the process. I am hoping we get the numbers tomorrow night.
Well official numbers may be a bit less. Admin at the school feel confident they will have 500 9th and at least 450 10th
That I can believe but I don’t think that they are there yet but no one has publicly said what the numbers are, which is kind of ridiculous.
It sounds like they'll keep admitting kids under the table for as long as needed to hit their fall 2026 numbers.
The hypocrisy of shutting down pupil placements at other schools for foreign language while at the same time recruiting kids for Skyview is gross.
Anything else you want to complain about? It is one year that they are using in the opt in approach. Families know that they have to provide transportation. It is likely that the school will be open to pupil placement through the pathways unless they are full. They always knew that hitting the numbers would be hard, asking 500 rising 10th graders to move is ambitious. Next year they will have set boundaries and filling the class will be easier.
No, families don’t know that they have to provide transportation, whether this fall or later. They have to guess whether they’ll end up in boundary or not, which is no way to open a new school. And they made it hard on themselves to open a school with 1000 kids by not establishing boundaries when they had a perfect opportunity to do so, since there was already a county-wide review taking place.
You are either a paid shill for FCPS or prepared to justify any bad decision they make about Skyview as long as you can avoid another school you consider beneath you.
This year is the only year that deals with that and we all knew that. You seem upset that there are people who are fine with those conditions. No one likes how FCPS has dealt with this, including many of us who opted in. But I am not going to spend time complaining out things outside my control. We are excited with the option and happy to be attending.
If we were not comfortable with the uncertainty we would have made a different choice, some of our neighbors chose to stay at the base school. It was an individual choice.
And yes, reading the constant barrage of negativity is getting old for me. My kid would have been fine at either school, we chose Skyview for our reasons.
It’s pretty crazy how one person says Skyview will have 650 kids next year and another 1000, and no one really knows who is telling the truth and who is making stuff up.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Emails went out that the Skyview kids will be getting Academic Counseling soon. I am hoping that we have a better idea about the class size for the 9th and 10th graders tomorrow night. I would guess that there is a higher number of 9th graders then 10th graders.
Given that taxpayers across the county are funding this new school, they really should be transparent about the number of students opting in and whether they plan to open up enrollment to students outside the designated five pyramids.
But they've boxed themselves in. If they limit enrollment to students in the five pyramids and don't get 1000 kids opting in, it demonstrates their opt-in model didn't meet expectations. If they start welcoming students from other pyramids, people will say Reid was more intent on opening a quasi-magnet than focusing on overcrowding relief at Chantilly or other schools.
I can confirm they have 500 for each grade
Interesting, I heard 650 total but no breakdown on the 9th vs 10th grade. The email sent out to my student mentioned that they had spots and that students outside of the 5 HS could apply to attend but it did not mention the process. I am hoping we get the numbers tomorrow night.
Well official numbers may be a bit less. Admin at the school feel confident they will have 500 9th and at least 450 10th
That I can believe but I don’t think that they are there yet but no one has publicly said what the numbers are, which is kind of ridiculous.
It sounds like they'll keep admitting kids under the table for as long as needed to hit their fall 2026 numbers.
The hypocrisy of shutting down pupil placements at other schools for foreign language while at the same time recruiting kids for Skyview is gross.
Anything else you want to complain about? It is one year that they are using in the opt in approach. Families know that they have to provide transportation. It is likely that the school will be open to pupil placement through the pathways unless they are full. They always knew that hitting the numbers would be hard, asking 500 rising 10th graders to move is ambitious. Next year they will have set boundaries and filling the class will be easier.
No, families don’t know that they have to provide transportation, whether this fall or later. They have to guess whether they’ll end up in boundary or not, which is no way to open a new school. And they made it hard on themselves to open a school with 1000 kids by not establishing boundaries when they had a perfect opportunity to do so, since there was already a county-wide review taking place.
You are either a paid shill for FCPS or prepared to justify any bad decision they make about Skyview as long as you can avoid another school you consider beneath you.
This year is the only year that deals with that and we all knew that. You seem upset that there are people who are fine with those conditions. No one likes how FCPS has dealt with this, including many of us who opted in. But I am not going to spend time complaining out things outside my control. We are excited with the option and happy to be attending.
If we were not comfortable with the uncertainty we would have made a different choice, some of our neighbors chose to stay at the base school. It was an individual choice.
And yes, reading the constant barrage of negativity is getting old for me. My kid would have been fine at either school, we chose Skyview for our reasons.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Emails went out that the Skyview kids will be getting Academic Counseling soon. I am hoping that we have a better idea about the class size for the 9th and 10th graders tomorrow night. I would guess that there is a higher number of 9th graders then 10th graders.
Given that taxpayers across the county are funding this new school, they really should be transparent about the number of students opting in and whether they plan to open up enrollment to students outside the designated five pyramids.
But they've boxed themselves in. If they limit enrollment to students in the five pyramids and don't get 1000 kids opting in, it demonstrates their opt-in model didn't meet expectations. If they start welcoming students from other pyramids, people will say Reid was more intent on opening a quasi-magnet than focusing on overcrowding relief at Chantilly or other schools.
I can confirm they have 500 for each grade
Interesting, I heard 650 total but no breakdown on the 9th vs 10th grade. The email sent out to my student mentioned that they had spots and that students outside of the 5 HS could apply to attend but it did not mention the process. I am hoping we get the numbers tomorrow night.
Well official numbers may be a bit less. Admin at the school feel confident they will have 500 9th and at least 450 10th
That I can believe but I don’t think that they are there yet but no one has publicly said what the numbers are, which is kind of ridiculous.
It sounds like they'll keep admitting kids under the table for as long as needed to hit their fall 2026 numbers.
The hypocrisy of shutting down pupil placements at other schools for foreign language while at the same time recruiting kids for Skyview is gross.
Anything else you want to complain about? It is one year that they are using in the opt in approach. Families know that they have to provide transportation. It is likely that the school will be open to pupil placement through the pathways unless they are full. They always knew that hitting the numbers would be hard, asking 500 rising 10th graders to move is ambitious. Next year they will have set boundaries and filling the class will be easier.
No, families don’t know that they have to provide transportation, whether this fall or later. They have to guess whether they’ll end up in boundary or not, which is no way to open a new school. And they made it hard on themselves to open a school with 1000 kids by not establishing boundaries when they had a perfect opportunity to do so, since there was already a county-wide review taking place.
You are either a paid shill for FCPS or prepared to justify any bad decision they make about Skyview as long as you can avoid another school you consider beneath you.