Anonymous wrote:Used to teach in Arlington, now teach in FCPS. i can assure parents that the North Arlington schools are as good as any school in Fairfax county.
Anonymous wrote:Used to teach in Arlington, now teach in FCPS. i can assure parents that the North Arlington schools are as good as any school in Fairfax county.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Olde Creek/Frost/Woodson. Small elementary school with an active PTA, and very much a neighborhood school. The middle and high schools speak for themselves.
the neighborhood around olde creek is nice and the kids walk to school. it is a great little community.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What about Arlington?
The only good pyramid is Yorktown the rest have high FARMS.
And Lord knows we don't want to have to mix with the poors! Ick!!!![]()
High farms take away resources and lower the academic standard for the school. Nothing against the less fortunate but if I am paying a million and a 1/2 for a house I want good schools.
The insinuation about Arlington schools here is baloney, but over the past few months some Fairfax County parents have been saying Arlington schools are "scary" and that Yorktown is no better than a mediocre Fairfax County high school. The reality is that schools/school pyramids with roughly 20-30% FARMS are some of the most popular in Arlington. Families keep paying 1.5 million to live in these neighborhoods and the schools keep growing so I wouldn't worry about the the FARMS rates or low academic standards. The two N Arlington high schools will be %150 over capacity in a few years because of all the kids. This year Arlington has 4 National Merit Finalists and around 20 semifinalists, and the majority of those kids are not from the Yorktown district... Btw, Wakefield HS in South Arlington is 40% FARMS, below the 50% threshold some people on this forum state.
In Fairfax County, I wonder why the Greatschools boosters don't come out and support Luther Jackson MS which has usually been an 8 or 9. It has an AAP center, and is below 40% FARMS. All I ever hear are rumors about gangs and violence, which are unfounded. Anyway, the OP asked about FCPS, so I don't know why Arlington had to get dragged into this.
Anonymous wrote:
The insinuation about Arlington schools here is baloney, but over the past few months some Fairfax County parents have been saying Arlington schools are "scary" and that Yorktown is no better than a mediocre Fairfax County high school. The reality is that schools/school pyramids with roughly 20-30% FARMS are some of the most popular in Arlington. Families keep paying 1.5 million to live in these neighborhoods and the schools keep growing so I wouldn't worry about the the FARMS rates or low academic standards. The two N Arlington high schools will be %150 over capacity in a few years because of all the kids. This year Arlington has 4 National Merit Finalists and around 20 semifinalists, and the majority of those kids are not from the Yorktown district... Btw, Wakefield HS in South Arlington is 40% FARMS, below the 50% threshold some people on this forum state.
In Fairfax County, I wonder why the Greatschools boosters don't come out and support Luther Jackson MS which has usually been an 8 or 9. It has an AAP center, and is below 40% FARMS. All I ever hear are rumors about gangs and violence, which are unfounded. Anyway, the OP asked about FCPS, so I don't know why Arlington had to get dragged into this.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What about Arlington?
The only good pyramid is Yorktown the rest have high FARMS.
And Lord knows we don't want to have to mix with the poors! Ick!!!![]()
High farms take away resources and lower the academic standard for the school. Nothing against the less fortunate but if I am paying a million and a 1/2 for a house I want good schools.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What about Arlington?
The only good pyramid is Yorktown the rest have high FARMS.
And Lord knows we don't want to have to mix with the poors! Ick!!!![]()
High farms take away resources and lower the academic standard for the school. Nothing against the less fortunate but if I am paying a million and a 1/2 for a house I want good schools.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What about Arlington?
The only good pyramid is Yorktown the rest have high FARMS.
And Lord knows we don't want to have to mix with the poors! Ick!!!![]()
High farms take away resources and lower the academic standard for the school. Nothing against the less fortunate but if I am paying a million and a 1/2 for a house I want good schools.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What about Arlington?
The only good pyramid is Yorktown the rest have high FARMS.
And Lord knows we don't want to have to mix with the poors! Ick!!!![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What about Arlington?
The only good pyramid is Yorktown the rest have high FARMS.
Anonymous wrote:DH has a point....if you put the $$$ into a mortgage, you might get the money back when you sell, presuming the kids get the same education.
West Springfield has some issues...at least it did 15 years ago, when I was buying, west springfield had the mixing bowl construction and issues around springfield mall. We ended up in Vienna. (that worked out well, as my (same) job moved from Arlington to Tysons, back to arlington, and now to reston.
Anonymous wrote:What about Arlington?