Anonymous wrote:13:05
Move ATS south and don't allow kids from high-preforming schools to apply is my proposal. I might not have been clear.
It's a logical solution. ATS will hate it.
Anonymous wrote:There are no good ways for buses to access the Reed site unless you pave driveways out to neighborhood streets (18th, Madison, or Lexington on the other side) and route them that way. Having buses come in and out on Washington Blvd does not seem workable, particularly as Wash Blvd picks up more traffic after the 66 tolls go in.
These kind of traffic issues plague sites throughout Arlington, but that seems like all the more reason to build in a way that maximizes the walking population at a given school. We're a dense, urban county, and it's only going to become more so over time. It doesn't seem to make a whole lot of sense to build without regard for the amount of buses we are putting on the road (and operating over the long haul).
Anonymous wrote:A few things bother me about APS's "choice" system.
1. It's notmuch of a choice. Some of the school's mentioned up-thread cannot accommodate lottery so are not really choices. For the few who do lottery in, we spend huge amounts on transportation and that's illogical!
2. I get that a 2- rated school family might want to apply to choice. However, I don't get why someone from a high-test-scoring neighborhood school (like McK which is not statistically different from ATS in scores) would want ATS. To make the system fair, only ARL kids from low-preforming schools should be allowed in the lottery. over 400 kids lotteries for 30 spaces. Or make it all VPI.
Best yet, make it a neighborhood school and move ATS down south.
I think all the ATS spot takers from high-preforming schools should be ashamed of themselves. If you think you are a "libral" or a democrat, your
3. How much administrative work does it cost to run all these fake lotteries (I say fake b/c 30:400 is just stupid; I think the odds are lower for immersion. We wanted immersion but there was, I think 4 spots the year before and non our first year).
We spend 500mil on education for 26K kids. We should be able to get McKinley scores in all of our neighborhood schools and we are such a small county, our transportation costs should be tiny. And our admin costs which are outrageous. Stop the lottery system, save money, improve all schools.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm thrilled to be paying for the second renovation of reed in a dozen years.
Tell me about it. If they had just turned Reed back into a neighborhood elementary school in 2009 when they remodeled it, we would not have needed the McKinley and Ashlawn additions either. I adore the Westover Library and use it regularly, but what happens to it now if they turn Reed into a 725 student "choice" elementary school?
Wasn't it 22million the first time? How much for the re-do. And honestly, the roads around Reed are so narrow that it should be a neighborhood school. There's no room for bussing!
Gads sometimes ARL makes no sense.
I too love Westover library and fully support that preschool for teacher's kids. It's impossible get preschool in ARL and teachers don't need that aggravation. (no, I'm not a teacher; I've hired two nannyies in my life though).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm thrilled to be paying for the second renovation of reed in a dozen years.
Tell me about it. If they had just turned Reed back into a neighborhood elementary school in 2009 when they remodeled it, we would not have needed the McKinley and Ashlawn additions either. I adore the Westover Library and use it regularly, but what happens to it now if they turn Reed into a 725 student "choice" elementary school?
I'm new to this. What is the Reed building being used for right now?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm thrilled to be paying for the second renovation of reed in a dozen years.
Tell me about it. If they had just turned Reed back into a neighborhood elementary school in 2009 when they remodeled it, we would not have needed the McKinley and Ashlawn additions either. I adore the Westover Library and use it regularly, but what happens to it now if they turn Reed into a 725 student "choice" elementary school?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm thrilled to be paying for the second renovation of reed in a dozen years.
Tell me about it. If they had just turned Reed back into a neighborhood elementary school in 2009 when they remodeled it, we would not have needed the McKinley and Ashlawn additions either. I adore the Westover Library and use it regularly, but what happens to it now if they turn Reed into a 725 student "choice" elementary school?
Anonymous wrote:I live pretty close to the Madison Community Center. There is already a building there and everything. Even if you left its current footprint exactly as-is, you could create hundreds of seats. I do think it would need to be a choice school because I expect playing fields etc. would be more limited and you'd need parent buy-in to some of the limitations created by maintaining some of the historic designation etc. But to completely keep it off the list of sites available for a school just because it can't be built into a huge school seems like a self-inflicted injury on the part of Arlington. There are some old timers who live in the neighborhood who would probably fight tooth and nail to prevent any change. I suspect that is the true obstacle, and one to be taken seriously.
Anonymous wrote:I'm thrilled to be paying for the second renovation of reed in a dozen years.