Anonymous wrote:Why did we re elect Nancy Van Doren? This is all her doing. She is the worst.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm pretty sure Ed center can be reconfigured to add a cafeteria and a black box theater (how about the planetarium?) plus some common areas. I don't know much about sports but I'm pretty sure 1,300 kids is plenty enough to field a football team - but a pretty bad one, probably.
To be clear they aren't talking about renovating the actual Ed Center building. They world knock it down and build a whole new facility. I still think it's a horrible idea to deal with the problem by basically just making W-L a 4,000 kid school.
Really? That's gonna take several years to complete - 5 years maybe when all is said and done?
Anonymous wrote:Is it pretty much a given that neighborhoods like Westover and Bluemont will be reassigned to the new school along with Carlin Springs and other South Arlington neighborhoods?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm pretty sure Ed center can be reconfigured to add a cafeteria and a black box theater (how about the planetarium?) plus some common areas. I don't know much about sports but I'm pretty sure 1,300 kids is plenty enough to field a football team - but a pretty bad one, probably.
To be clear they aren't talking about renovating the actual Ed Center building. They world knock it down and build a whole new facility. I still think it's a horrible idea to deal with the problem by basically just making W-L a 4,000 kid school.
Anonymous wrote:I'm pretty sure Ed center can be reconfigured to add a cafeteria and a black box theater (how about the planetarium?) plus some common areas. I don't know much about sports but I'm pretty sure 1,300 kids is plenty enough to field a football team - but a pretty bad one, probably.
Anonymous wrote:The planetarium will be torn down if Ed Center is chosen. School Board already confirmed that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The Kenmore campus is 32 acres (same as Wakefield), so presumably there would be room for a football stadium there.
gosh WHY MUST THERE BE a DAMN FOOTBALL STADIUM at EVERY HS???!!! PRIORITIES PEOPLE!!!
yes i'm yelling!
Football builds a community more than any other sport. It's the American past time.
Just take out the word football.
Spectators for many other sports at the 3 Arlington high schools use the stadium in addition to football.
Then there's the added bonus (duh!) that the stadium surrounds an athletic field that people from across the county use about 20 hours a day when the students aren't using it.
Then there's the fact that competition for the use of the county owned athletic fields is increasing because of all the various youth (and more students in the county equals more students playing sports) through adult leagues that use them so having an athletic field at the 4th HS would be very good not just for its students but for anyone in the county that plays/runs/uses an outdoor athletic fields.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I hear you but it more than just football, as others have pointed out. It is access to all sorts of curricular and extracurricular offerings that a comprehensive high school provides. We will simply have too many students for everyone to have a chance at participating if we only have 3 high schools.
such as? also those don't require 32-acre land i don't think.
Not all require 32acres but to name a few outside activities that require space -- tennis, soccer, baseball, field hockey, track, marching band. And, as PP pointed out, football is really a shorthand for the idea that you need a fourth HS that offers the range of extracurriculars. A given HS can only hold so many drama productions, have so many kids in an orchestra, reasonable number of kids on the newspaper or yearbook staff, and so on. With only a few excepts, HB and ArlTech students pull back to the 3 mega HS and continue to contribute to the population who want access to those types of activities. A fourth comprehensive HS increases the opportunity for participation.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I hear you but it more than just football, as others have pointed out. It is access to all sorts of curricular and extracurricular offerings that a comprehensive high school provides. We will simply have too many students for everyone to have a chance at participating if we only have 3 high schools.
such as? also those don't require 32-acre land i don't think.