Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m fine with that, but I just think that’s a different discussion than whether to close SSIMS. And I blame Taylor for not being more clear with the new boundary options (E-G) in terms of explaining what happens in years 27-30. It’s not SSIMS parents fault that this is unclear. And it’s also unfair to blame them for advocating to keep their school open bc MCPS is rushing and not explaining how this will work.
They are separate decisions, but it is 100000% the obligation of families who advocated to keep SSIMS open, to also advocate for current SSIMS neighborhoods to stay at SSIMS. It is absolutely unacceptable for them to say "no, we want to keep this old falling-apart school because it's important to our community" and then step back and allow new families who do not want that school to be the ones to be sent there and deal with all the problems that SSIMS families claimed they were willing to deal with in order to "save our school."
Anonymous wrote:Options E-G don’t have SSIMS at all. They show what would happen once SSIMS is closed in June 2030 but still go into effect in 2027. That is what is so confusing. They don’t explain what happens for those three years.
And these options were released before the board voted to delay the decision. Even if the expedited closure went through, SSIMS wasn’t going to close until June 2030 (at the earliest, that assumes the two massive renovations of eastern and Sligo could happen fast enough to absorb all the SSIMS kids).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s actually the options that keep SSIMS open (A-D) that dont shuffle kids back and forth. It’s the new options that close SSIMS (E-G) that involve the shuffling because the changes take effect in 2027 and the school is not proposed to close until 2030. So all this shuffling is directly related to Taylor’s rushed proposal and lack of communication. This whole proposal has created a mess and it’s very confusing.
Totally and completely false. Options A-D radically change the SSIMS and Sligo boundaries (and probably other schools too.). Options E-G kept them close to as-is for 2027-2030 and kept Sligo very similar far beyond that.
What I meant is options A-D don’t involve shuffling because SSIMS stays open in those scenarios. I didn’t think options A-D are even considered if SSIMS closes. But maybe they are?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s actually the options that keep SSIMS open (A-D) that dont shuffle kids back and forth. It’s the new options that close SSIMS (E-G) that involve the shuffling because the changes take effect in 2027 and the school is not proposed to close until 2030. So all this shuffling is directly related to Taylor’s rushed proposal and lack of communication. This whole proposal has created a mess and it’s very confusing.
Totally and completely false. Options A-D radically change the SSIMS and Sligo boundaries (and probably other schools too.). Options E-G kept them close to as-is for 2027-2030 and kept Sligo very similar far beyond that.
Anonymous wrote:Does anyone know: when WILL the decision be made? The resolution tabled it until… when?
Regardless, unless the decision is made NOT to close SSIMS —soon— I think changing the boundaries is super unfair to families. Imagine they decide in 2026 or early 2027 to close SSIMS but they already committed to Option B.
Anonymous wrote:It’s actually the options that keep SSIMS open (A-D) that dont shuffle kids back and forth. It’s the new options that close SSIMS (E-G) that involve the shuffling because the changes take effect in 2027 and the school is not proposed to close until 2030. So all this shuffling is directly related to Taylor’s rushed proposal and lack of communication. This whole proposal has created a mess and it’s very confusing.
Anonymous wrote:I’m fine with that, but I just think that’s a different discussion than whether to close SSIMS. And I blame Taylor for not being more clear with the new boundary options (E-G) in terms of explaining what happens in years 27-30. It’s not SSIMS parents fault that this is unclear. And it’s also unfair to blame them for advocating to keep their school open bc MCPS is rushing and not explaining how this will work.
Anonymous wrote:I don’t really think you understand what the advocacy is about. It’s that two larger middle schools are much worse for academic outcomes than three smaller ones (regardless of who attends). It’s that it would be terrible for downtown SS to have two holding schools in the heart of a transit-rich, pedestrian area potentially for decades. It’s that the neighborhood can’t handle all the bus traffic of bussing neighborhood kids out and kids from other areas in to use the holding schools. It’s that Taylor is lying about the lack of safety of the purple line (it will be very safe). It’s that there has been no discussion of what will happen to immersion programs.
Where in any of these arguments are parents saying they only want current SSIMS students to go to SSIMS? That’s a boundary study debate, not a whether to close SSIMS debate.