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Anonymous wrote:I don't think Wootton has much to complain about.
Quince Orchard is obviously to he happiest with the boundaries.
Northwest is the big loser.
QO is a loser with the regional programs; QO is in a region with Gaithersburg, Magruder, and Watkins Mill and not Poolesville.
Watkins Mill already has an IB set up, but SMACs and Humanities will have to be stood up from scratch and both will be at Gaithersburg.
Correction, SMACS will be at Gaithersburg, Humanities will be at Watkins Mill along with the IB and Critical Languages, Cultures, and Global Connections.
Under the regional program, it looks like Gaithersburg HS is set up as the tech high school (SMACS, Cybersecurity, Digital Communication: Animation and Game Design), while Watkins Mill will be the Humanities high school
What is SMACS? Is Gaithersburg HS strong in high tech & Watlkin Mills strong in humanities?
SMACS is Science, Mathematics, and Computer Science. It's the STEM magnets at Blair (for Down County) and Poolesville (Up County).
General consensus is that Watkins Mill IB is not as good as the County-Wide Program at Richard Montgomery.
It's to be determined how good the new programs will be, since they're expanding the programs from 2 schools to 6. I think it's going to be a rough start, but maybe once my kids have kids, it'll be well-established...
There is no A SMCS...and it is becoming STEM because it's a new curriculum.
The impression I got was that SMCS was going to stay essentially the same. Each region gets 5 different concentrations
1. Medical Science and Healthcare
2. STEM
3. IB, Humanities, and Languages
4. Leadership and Public Service
5. Visual and Performing Arts, Design and Communication
And then each region will determine how they're going to meet them. So Poolesville is going to shoehorn their Global Ecology into the Leadership concentration, rather than the STEM.
The slide about Region 5 shows Gaithersburg will have SMCS as a STEM concentration, so my assumption will be they will try to mirror the curriculum for SMCS. That said, they're going to be building the plane as it takes off, so the initial cohort and classes will be the entry level 9th grade classes and then they will try to build up as the classes age up.
Instead, the fear for Blair / Poolesville is that since they're drawing from a smaller pool of students that some of the really advanced classes (really high level math, physics) won't be able to be offered because there won't be enough students at that school with the interest and capability of taking them. I heard talk that maybe they can do remote classes across the regions for some of these classes, but the quality cannot be the same.