Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:TJ is long overdue for the use of creative mechanisms other than quotas for bringing in a more diverse population. It has to happen. No reasonable person could support the status quo.
FCPS re-ups the designation of TJ as a Governor's School every year with the least amount of discussion possible. The last thing they want to do is get into a big debate over TJ admissions like happened recently in NYC over admissions to Stuyvesant.
Adjusting boundaries in the name of "equity" is for the little people. TJ is about excellence.
Hopefully adjusting boundaries will ultimately, indirectly lead to a more diverse and excellent TJ.
Really the only thing they need to do is stop sending such a high percentage of the AAP kids in western Fairfax to a single AAP center - Carson. Let the AAP kids stay at their base schools and over time you'd see some additional diversity at TJ.
Why? Going to their base schools isn't going to stop them from passing the test.
Then there’s no reason to bus them to Carson, is there? Let’s see if you’re right.
That doesn't answer the question of how not sending them to Carson is going to increase diversity at TJ.
There's no need to answer your question. You've said it makes no difference if AAP kids attend Carson or another middle school. In that case, we can save money and send those kids to their base schools. Game over.
Anonymous wrote:Not PP, but FCPS could have slots for each middle school, which at a minimum would create greater geographic diversity. A very large percentage of TJ kids now come from four pyramids: McLean, Oakton, Langley, and Chantilly.
Anonymous wrote:Not PP, but FCPS could have slots for each middle school, which at a minimum would create greater geographic diversity. A very large percentage of TJ kids now come from four pyramids: McLean, Oakton, Langley, and Chantilly.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:TJ is long overdue for the use of creative mechanisms other than quotas for bringing in a more diverse population. It has to happen. No reasonable person could support the status quo.
FCPS re-ups the designation of TJ as a Governor's School every year with the least amount of discussion possible. The last thing they want to do is get into a big debate over TJ admissions like happened recently in NYC over admissions to Stuyvesant.
Adjusting boundaries in the name of "equity" is for the little people. TJ is about excellence.
Hopefully adjusting boundaries will ultimately, indirectly lead to a more diverse and excellent TJ.
Really the only thing they need to do is stop sending such a high percentage of the AAP kids in western Fairfax to a single AAP center - Carson. Let the AAP kids stay at their base schools and over time you'd see some additional diversity at TJ.
Why? Going to their base schools isn't going to stop them from passing the test.
Then there’s no reason to bus them to Carson, is there? Let’s see if you’re right.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:TJ is long overdue for the use of creative mechanisms other than quotas for bringing in a more diverse population. It has to happen. No reasonable person could support the status quo.
FCPS re-ups the designation of TJ as a Governor's School every year with the least amount of discussion possible. The last thing they want to do is get into a big debate over TJ admissions like happened recently in NYC over admissions to Stuyvesant.
Adjusting boundaries in the name of "equity" is for the little people. TJ is about excellence.
Hopefully adjusting boundaries will ultimately, indirectly lead to a more diverse and excellent TJ.
Really the only thing they need to do is stop sending such a high percentage of the AAP kids in western Fairfax to a single AAP center - Carson. Let the AAP kids stay at their base schools and over time you'd see some additional diversity at TJ.
Anonymous wrote:TJ is long overdue for the use of creative mechanisms other than quotas for bringing in a more diverse population. It has to happen. No reasonable person could support the status quo.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:TJ is long overdue for the use of creative mechanisms other than quotas for bringing in a more diverse population. It has to happen. No reasonable person could support the status quo.
FCPS re-ups the designation of TJ as a Governor's School every year with the least amount of discussion possible. The last thing they want to do is get into a big debate over TJ admissions like happened recently in NYC over admissions to Stuyvesant.
Adjusting boundaries in the name of "equity" is for the little people. TJ is about excellence.
Hopefully adjusting boundaries will ultimately, indirectly lead to a more diverse and excellent TJ.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My priority is my kids going to school in the community they live in which they do. If boundaries were redrawn and they went somewhere else it would not feel like our community anymore (would be across a major highway). I'm not really worried about because it would be completely nonsensical.
I don't think they'll really shake things up, but if they do, they better do it to every school, not just a few that don't have as vocal parents as others.
Also, the "under-enrolled" schools like Mt. Vernon and Lee are underenrolled for a reason. Many of the more wealthy families that are zoned for those schools just do private. Fairfax will lose the students it wants to keep to private schools if they shake things up too much.
There's probably more kids in the Langley pyramid in privates than any other pyramid in FCPS. My guess is that, if they got rid of IB at Lee and moved 400 kids into the school from LB, WS and/or SC, they'd retain most families and there'd be a significant improvement in the school's reputation. The situation at Mount Vernon might be different, because the Waynewood/Fort Hunt areas are wealthier, and there would be more trepidation and racism at play in sending kids to MV, which until recently always had the highest percentage of black kids in the county.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Look, the vast majority of us with little kids in the system just want them to be in a school that is not overcrowded. Funny enough where I leave the schools that are not overcrowded are the majority-white schools. I pay taxes too, why shouldn't my [minority] child have access to a school that doesn't have an entire grade and almost all of the "specials" in trailers when your school has extra space??
??The only "majority white" school I can think of that is not overcrowded is Langley.
DP here. There are elementary and middle schools that may fall in this category.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My priority is my kids going to school in the community they live in which they do. If boundaries were redrawn and they went somewhere else it would not feel like our community anymore (would be across a major highway). I'm not really worried about because it would be completely nonsensical.
I don't think they'll really shake things up, but if they do, they better do it to every school, not just a few that don't have as vocal parents as others.
Also, the "under-enrolled" schools like Mt. Vernon and Lee are underenrolled for a reason. Many of the more wealthy families that are zoned for those schools just do private. Fairfax will lose the students it wants to keep to private schools if they shake things up too much.
There's probably more kids in the Langley pyramid in privates than any other pyramid in FCPS. My guess is that, if they got rid of IB at Lee and moved 400 kids into the school from LB, WS and/or SC, they'd retain most families and there'd be a significant improvement in the school's reputation. The situation at Mount Vernon might be different, because the Waynewood/Fort Hunt areas are wealthier, and there would be more trepidation and racism at play in sending kids to MV, which until recently always had the highest percentage of black kids in the county.
Anonymous wrote:My priority is my kids going to school in the community they live in which they do. If boundaries were redrawn and they went somewhere else it would not feel like our community anymore (would be across a major highway). I'm not really worried about because it would be completely nonsensical.
I don't think they'll really shake things up, but if they do, they better do it to every school, not just a few that don't have as vocal parents as others.
Also, the "under-enrolled" schools like Mt. Vernon and Lee are underenrolled for a reason. Many of the more wealthy families that are zoned for those schools just do private. Fairfax will lose the students it wants to keep to private schools if they shake things up too much.
Anonymous wrote:My priority is my kids going to school in the community they live in which they do. If boundaries were redrawn and they went somewhere else it would not feel like our community anymore (would be across a major highway). I'm not really worried about because it would be completely nonsensical.
I don't think they'll really shake things up, but if they do, they better do it to every school, not just a few that don't have as vocal parents as others.
Also, the "under-enrolled" schools like Mt. Vernon and Lee are underenrolled for a reason. Many of the more wealthy families that are zoned for those schools just do private. Fairfax will lose the students it wants to keep to private schools if they shake things up too much.
Anonymous wrote:Look, the vast majority of us with little kids in the system just want them to be in a school that is not overcrowded. Funny enough where I leave the schools that are not overcrowded are the majority-white schools. I pay taxes too, why shouldn't my [minority] child have access to a school that doesn't have an entire grade and almost all of the "specials" in trailers when your school has extra space??
??The only "majority white" school I can think of that is not overcrowded is Langley.