Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The problems with ACHS all stem from one problem: It's too big. 4,200 high school students is too many to effectively teach, let alone build a functioning school community around. Not enough space, teams, clubs, college counselors - nothing! The only way to make ACHS a significantly better place to learn is to open a new school.
I actually went to a 6000 person high school that had similar demographics to ACHS. My senior class had 1500 kids in it. The difference is that we were all kept on a very short leash. We had a campus with multiple buildings that we went between but caught outside between classes and punishment was dealt out. Of course we hated it and felt we were in a “prison” where no one trusted us. We had two credible bomb threats while I was there and the students who called them in were prosecuted.
It’s time to start following through with discipline.
Anonymous wrote:The problems with ACHS all stem from one problem: It's too big. 4,200 high school students is too many to effectively teach, let alone build a functioning school community around. Not enough space, teams, clubs, college counselors - nothing! The only way to make ACHS a significantly better place to learn is to open a new school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:People really need to stop wishing for a second high school. PP is right. It's never going to happen. It's not just the current council and school board. This goes back years. And with the mayor and council out to punish the school board for voting for SROs and metal detectors...they are going to try to claw back all the CIP money and I bet they take another pass at housing on school grounds. I think this school board will cave on it.
It's worse than CIP, the City is refusing to fund special education forcing ACPS to violate ADA and IDEA. So this is where the Council is. They are not good people.
Anonymous wrote:People really need to stop wishing for a second high school. PP is right. It's never going to happen. It's not just the current council and school board. This goes back years. And with the mayor and council out to punish the school board for voting for SROs and metal detectors...they are going to try to claw back all the CIP money and I bet they take another pass at housing on school grounds. I think this school board will cave on it.
Anonymous wrote:The problems with ACHS all stem from one problem: It's too big. 4,200 high school students is too many to effectively teach, let alone build a functioning school community around. Not enough space, teams, clubs, college counselors - nothing! The only way to make ACHS a significantly better place to learn is to open a new school.
Anonymous wrote:I had no idea how deep into the equity grift ASB is. I think she purposefully hid this as she wanted to come across as another North Ridge mom wanting schools open. But with the reality that English Language Learners, and the financial and logistical demands they place on ACPS/ACHS, is a significant contribution to the system's precipitous decline into chaos I find it really alarming and frustrating that she is a signatory on this. https://www.elequity.org/#statement
ACPS has always had a priority and reality problem, but I have a serious question, who is going to pay for this all? The budget only supposes a 1% enrollment increase per year, yet certain schools, including the high school, have seen almost 7% this year, some ESes over 10%. ACPS chooses to "educate" english language leaners until age 22. So, yes, there are 22.5 year olds in your child's gym class. The Commonwealth does not fund these adult students, as it is optional for districts to enroll adults. VA law allows districts to charge tuition to adult students, yet ALX seems to think that people will just continue to pay 8-12% more a year in property taxes instead of doing this. The school is already physically exceptionally overcrowded.
My last question is can we at least tell the 20 year-old who is smoking weed/fentanyl at school and fighting to just never come back to school?
Anonymous wrote:https://www.alxnow.com/2023/03/14/alexandrias-city-council-and-school-board-clash-in-intense-budget-battle/
Alexandria City council does not put schools or students first. They control the budget and the land. Many school issues are not going to change until city council puts schools as a priority. I would like to be able to send my child to public school and not have to pay for private school or move. We have to think about who supports the children when voting for city council. Chapman for one, is the worst. He pushed for housing on school grounds, he vetos school safety measures and votes against everything the school board recommends.
Anonymous wrote:I would love to see them open campus and make space for kids to do something productive during lunch and afterschool. From what I can tell, they got rid of clubs and tutoring during lunch. The kids wandering afterschool may not join a team, but what about help finding a job? What about a place to hang out after school on campus that's not McDonalds where adults can supervise-- free food goes a long way. It's got to be in partnership with the city or other groups, but right now it's too many kids in one place with nothing to do.