Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It does not make sense to me to have the Tysons high schools (Madison, Langley, Marshall, and McLean) to be in three different regions. Tysons is slated to grow considerably in the next decade and those boundaries are sure to be adjusted.
That has nothing to do with region structure.
+1
Not a fan of Reid or this SB, but the regions will always have "overlap." It is not possible to have distinct regions when you have heavily populated areas. For example, Madison is about a mile from Oakton--and most people consider it to be Vienna--not Tysons. Go in the other direction from Madison and you would have South Lakes.
You could play this game all across Fairfax County. There will always be overlap.
What are you blathering about? Region 5 isn’t even contiguous now. Do the morons running FCPS now even know where their schools are located?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It does not make sense to me to have the Tysons high schools (Madison, Langley, Marshall, and McLean) to be in three different regions. Tysons is slated to grow considerably in the next decade and those boundaries are sure to be adjusted.
That has nothing to do with region structure.
+1
Not a fan of Reid or this SB, but the regions will always have "overlap." It is not possible to have distinct regions when you have heavily populated areas. For example, Madison is about a mile from Oakton--and most people consider it to be Vienna--not Tysons. Go in the other direction from Madison and you would have South Lakes.
You could play this game all across Fairfax County. There will always be overlap.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It does not make sense to me to have the Tysons high schools (Madison, Langley, Marshall, and McLean) to be in three different regions. Tysons is slated to grow considerably in the next decade and those boundaries are sure to be adjusted.
That has nothing to do with region structure.
Anonymous wrote:It does not make sense to me to have the Tysons high schools (Madison, Langley, Marshall, and McLean) to be in three different regions. Tysons is slated to grow considerably in the next decade and those boundaries are sure to be adjusted.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:care to elaborate?Anonymous wrote:Yeah it’s out. Not what was expected.
The pyramids in region 6 are Marshall and Annandale
https://www.fcps.edu/department/office-chief-schools
They’re not in region 2 anymore
The website says Annandale, hayfield and Lewis for R6.
Interesting combination. Surprised they still have some gargantuan regions, so decreasing size of administrative load wasn't a primary factor.
Anonymous wrote:What does this re-org mean for students of affected schools? does it affect AAP/IB transfers, divisions for sport competitions, or anything else of note?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:care to elaborate?Anonymous wrote:Yeah it’s out. Not what was expected.
The pyramids in region 6 are Marshall and Annandale
https://www.fcps.edu/department/office-chief-schools
They’re not in region 2 anymore
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:care to elaborate?Anonymous wrote:Yeah it’s out. Not what was expected.
The pyramids in region 6 are Marshall and Annandale
https://www.fcps.edu/department/office-chief-schools
They’re not in region 2 anymore
The website says Annandale, hayfield and Lewis for R6.
Anonymous wrote:Marshall parents are going to be PISSED.