Anonymous wrote:Easy solution to Bailey's: cancel the magnet program. If that is not enough, cancel the immersion program.
Two extra programs in a school as overcrowded as Bailey's defies common sense.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I do wonder if it illegal to have classes at some schools and not others in the same school division with no real reason or policy.
The magnet programs and the AAP programs do have policies associated with them, as do the world language programs and the academy programs, among others.
Anonymous wrote:Easy solution to Bailey's: cancel the magnet program. If that is not enough, cancel the immersion program.
Two extra programs in a school as overcrowded as Bailey's defies common sense.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Easy solution to Bailey's: cancel the magnet program. If that is not enough, cancel the immersion program.
Two extra programs in a school as overcrowded as Bailey's defies common sense.
Just like the AAP center at Haycock defies common sense.
Anonymous wrote:12:51 - I would also like to make the suggestion that, rather than continue to hash to death something that has already been decided, those of us with an interest in FCPS students might turn our attention to the severe overcrowding over at Bailey's ES. The situation there is every bit as severe as it is at Haycock, the difference being that there are not available classrooms to take advantage of nearby, as at Lemon Road.
What can we do to help Sandy Evans and get the Board of Supervisors to find a solution there?
Anonymous wrote:Easy solution to Bailey's: cancel the magnet program. If that is not enough, cancel the immersion program.
Two extra programs in a school as overcrowded as Bailey's defies common sense.
Anonymous wrote:Easy solution to Bailey's: cancel the magnet program. If that is not enough, cancel the immersion program.
Two extra programs in a school as overcrowded as Bailey's defies common sense.
Anonymous wrote:
No, I am not a Haycock parent. I was involved in the AAP restructuring issues and observed the "Haycock machine" in action. You may have won, but you won ugly. It's very dismissive to say there were just "some angry Cluster 2 parents" with a grievance. This was a large group of families who themselves had a very reasonable case -- that they had as much right to stay at Haycock, that they and their children contributed to Haycock's reputation and community. Of course, their presence and position was inconvenient to you, and you'd like to sugarcoat the fact you muscled out a group you targeted by appealing to anti-AAP sentiment and repeatedly implying that they were "other" and not really part of the school community.
Again, Strauss sounds reasonable to you because she's saying what you wanted to hear. To me, she sounds smarmy, disingenuous and condescending. I thought Schultz was right when she suggested that maybe Strauss should have done something about the Haycock situation long ago and not use this supposedly unpredictable crisis to justify making one particular segment of students suffer the worst consequences.
Anonymous wrote:Why do you think the problem occurred. I'll tell you why: there are far too many kids in the AAP program that do not belong there. These are not gifted children, they are smart, very bright, hardworking kids who have parents who make the effort to see that they get the best. Is there anything wrong with that? NO!
However, this does not mean the AAP program is what it is intended to be. The requirements for the program were relaxed in order to attract more disadvantage families. Instead, it just allowed any child with a parent who is alert and aggressive to get their children into the program.
Look at TJ:the requirements were changed to attract African American and Hipanic kids. What happened? TJ admitted the WRONG caucasion and Asian kids and now has to provide remedial math.
Once upon a time, the program was designed for children who were truly gifted. You talk about the "proper" credentials for teaching gifted kids--but the program is no longer about the gifted.
FCPS needs to fix this. Scrap the whole thing.
Anonymous wrote:Why do you think the problem occurred. I'll tell you why: there are far too many kids in the AAP program that do not belong there. These are not gifted children, they are smart, very bright, hardworking kids who have parents who make the effort to see that they get the best. Is there anything wrong with that? NO!
However, this does not mean the AAP program is what it is intended to be. The requirements for the program were relaxed in order to attract more disadvantage families. Instead, it just allowed any child with a parent who is alert and aggressive to get their children into the program.
Look at TJ:the requirements were changed to attract African American and Hipanic kids. What happened? TJ admitted the WRONG caucasion and Asian kids and now has to provide remedial math.
Once upon a time, the program was designed for children who were truly gifted. You talk about the "proper" credentials for teaching gifted kids--but the program is no longer about the gifted.
FCPS needs to fix this. Scrap the whole thing.
Anonymous wrote:As far as Janie Strauss is concerned, she always goes with staff--as long as staff protects Langley boundaries. Go back and read the history of the South Lakes redistricting. She was careful to keep Langley out of the mix-when several Langley neighborhoods are very close to South Lakes. She joined Stu Gibson in implying that Floris parents were bigots for wanting to stay at Westfield, meanwhile protecting her Langley corridor at all costs. Look at the Langley boundaries--the most western parts should be at Herndon and those along route 7 near the toll road should clearly go to South Lakes.
I am not so familiar with Haycock. Sounds like Schultz was trying to come up with a compromise and not favor one set of parents over the other. Maybe it wasn't practical--one thing for sure, it would have required some effort on the part of "Staff" and that does not ever suit "Staff".
It's not like Pimmit has never housed students. Sounds to me like it would be a good use of FCPS property. And, why are we trying to build more schools when there is FCPS property available?
FCPS has a tradition of favoring certain board members over others.
I'll have to say this for Strauss, she learned something from the last election. How many constituents of hers are going to Lemon Road?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It is also interesting to hear you haycock parents decrying an "us vs. them" mentality. Do you have no self-awareness at all? It was pretty sad to listen to one after another of you talk about your wonderful community that would be so much better if you could jettison a portion of the 9-11 year olds and their parents from said community. But keeping telling yourself how high minded you are.
The behavior described by a previous poster (who, by the way, didn't even identify whether she was a Haycock parent) is subtle, obviously too subtle for this poster to understand. At the risk of being flamed by this same, angry person, let me try again: The proposals raised by both Reed & Schultz on behalf of Cluster 2 parents were hardly more than flickers of an idea when they were presented. They were not fully researched, not fully discussed with the ENTIRE Haycock community, and certainly came as a huge last-minute surprise to many. There was not a single person from Haycock who talked about how they were eager to "jettison" anyone. Janie Strauss recognized the huge overcrowding problem coupled with the need for the renovation, and proposed a solution. She researched alternatives, discarded them if they seemed unworkable, and gave plenty of time for public input. Schultz and Reed heard from some angry Cluster 2 parents, and tried to make political hay by doing what they do best: harnessing angry people with a grievance and making them believe that, in fact, "the system" is corrupt, incompetently run, etc. These are people who want to make you believe that they only way you can get your way is essentially to overthrow the government by... voting more people like them into office. Schultz especially spent the meeting rolling her eyes, showing blatant disrespect for anyone who dared challenge her version of the facts... she acted imperious. Reed spent the SB "work session" defending her proposals from attacks by BOTH the Lemon Road and Haycock principals, neither of which she had (obviously) discussed her ideas with.
It's fine to disagree with people on a given issue, but I think we ought to demand that our politicians do so carefully, respectfully, and spend their time trying to find the best solution... but usually there is no perfect solution. Reed & Schultz --- and Epstein whenever I've come across her --- spend their time tearing down the SB, FCPS staff, and anyone who opposes them. If you cross them, you are an ENEMY. If you disagree, you are UNINFORMED. They dismiss facts to the contrary has having been gathered by an incompetent staff. From Strauss I heard a thoughtful argument. From these guys I heard an emotional appeal to "do no harm" or "keep the cohort together" without any analysis about what those phrases actually mean... Ted Velkoff did a nice job (politely) suggesting that no solution to the Haycock debacle would "do no harm," and implying that Reed & Schultz were being disingenuous to suggest there was such a solution. I think he was right.