Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Has there ever been any meaningful effort to push ACPS into allowing students to attend TJHSST? That seems like any obvious solution to some issues. They really should consider it with the launch of these academies.
I read in the paper (back when I was in college) that the city many years ago blocked efforts to consider allowing ACPS students to attend TJHSST. The city wanted to retain the talent within the school system.
I agree that this should be an option for kids in the City.
They may want to retain the talent but they are not offering the high-level classes across the board anymore.
During that debate years ago, a then-school board member had an awful quote about ACPS kids.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/local/education/alexandria-city-schools-consider-sending-students-to-fairfaxs-thomas-jefferson-high/2013/06/12/48e1068e-d37a-11e2-b05f-3ea3f0e7bb5a_story.html
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s a mess, for sure.
If only there was something the voters could do!?
Who has run for school board in recent years that would have fixed this? None come to mind from my recent memory.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Has there ever been any meaningful effort to push ACPS into allowing students to attend TJHSST? That seems like any obvious solution to some issues. They really should consider it with the launch of these academies.
I read in the paper (back when I was in college) that the city many years ago blocked efforts to consider allowing ACPS students to attend TJHSST. The city wanted to retain the talent within the school system.
Anonymous wrote:Has there ever been any meaningful effort to push ACPS into allowing students to attend TJHSST? That seems like any obvious solution to some issues. They really should consider it with the launch of these academies.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s a mess, for sure.
If only there was something the voters could do!?
Anonymous wrote:It’s a mess, for sure.
Anonymous wrote:Let’s not forget another key reason ACPS is determined to keep a single high school: to have as deep a bench as possible for its not-so-great athletics.
Anonymous wrote:The inspirational Remember the Titan movie probably has something to do with the city’s current one high school policy. Reopening one or both of the closed high schools like GW or Hammond or building another brand new one funded by new development (at Landmark or National Landing) would undo the unifying legacy of the story.
Hopefully the ACHS academies work out. Albert Einstein HS in Kensington is the only other local high school I can think of that offers numerous academy pathways. It’s a very small high school though at about 1800 students, a majority of them on reduced lunches, but generally high standardized test scores.
Anonymous wrote:Why don’t they do lottery schools like Arlington tech and HB Woodlawn? Would prevent some of the segregation. Then they could build a school in west end
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If they have the A and B days then it should operate like two completely distinct high schools where the A students and the B students never really mix? (The exceptions could just hop on the shuttle.)
If the A and B days are successful they could then transition the model into two completely distinct high schools without too much controversy?
Two distinct high schools will always be controversial. No politician will bring it up since every year will involve people screeching about racism when one school inevitably has lower scores. A and B days as well as wasting student time on shuttles is a desperate solution to avoid two separate schools.