Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Will the Board do a survey asking Spanish speaking homes if they would be interested in attending an immersion school? That way they can at least determine if it makes sense to move the immersion school to a heavy Spanish speaking area.
I mean I don't know, I doubt the struggle to find native Spanish speakers now really has to do with a longer bus ride or a complicated application process. I think native speakers want their kids in English immersion all day.
I think it's not about the application process so much as it is about not even understanding the American school system in general, or what the options are beyond neighborhood schools and what each instructional model means. The assumption is that they will enroll their children at an Immersion school if it's right there in their neighborhood, because it's the school that is familiar. I think that is a valid assumption.
They have been meeting with Latinx parents in person. The feedback, from what I understand, is less about concerns around the instructional model and more about logistics: they want to keep their kids in the current Carlin Springs building, and want them to continue to have bus service. I think there is some worry that kids who will be in the upper grades when this transition happens won't be proficient enough in (written) Spanish to be successful in Immersion, but they feel reassured that there will be a neighborhood school their children can continue in should this concern materialize.
If there is a concern about the Immersion model interfering with English language acquisition, I haven't heard it IRL. Although there is similarly not an awareness of the potential benefits of immersion for long-term literacy and fluency in both English and Spanish.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
As someone whose children actually goes to school with kids from these apartments I find all of these comments in this thread and others incredibly insensitive and hateful. Do you think it's the fault of those children or families that they h ave fewer resources or are new to the country? Should we simply refuse to educate or house economically disadvantaged children? These are human beings, not pawns or numbers or test scores. And many of them are smart and motivated and great peers.
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Where do the kids who are zoned to Barcorft go if this happens? It says its one of the most walkable schools, but many people don't use it. I'm guessing the Spanish speaking kids would stay and walk, but what about families who don't want immersion?
Choice out like they right now. Making Barcroft immersion isn't about making UMC in the walk zone attend. It's to draw UMC from outside who want immersion.
There are more families choosing this school with the new principal. Where will they all go? I think the issue is that all the people who could already choiced out - the rest are stuck going, which might be good for the school, but a problem if it becomes choice.
Anonymous wrote:Not trying to throw another neighborhood under the bus, but thinking constructively here, a better immersion option than Barcroft would be Barrett.
It breaks up a high-poverty school (Barrett has an even higher poverty rate than Barcroft), is centrally located and close to transit, has a large contingent of Spanish-speaking students already in attendance (and in the walk zone), AND gives more flexibility for shifting boundaries around without exacerbating the ED imbalance. The displaced Barrett students could be zoned for Long Branch and Ashlawn (with potential trickle-down boundary changes for those schools if needed).
A downside is that Barrett has high walk-ability, but if the SB is trying to attract native Spanish speakers to immersion, then use that walkability to advance the cause to retain as many of the walkers (many Spanish-speakers) as possible.
Another downside is that the SB could be seen as trying to "improve" the (demographics) situation at North Arlington schools over South Arlington ones. The flip side is, S. Arlington gets to "keep" a neighborhood school it otherwise might not (Barcroft) and with a bit of help (calendar change, keeping Barcroft boundaries intact), might even improve. And balancing the demographics better (across north AND south) benefits the school system as a whole.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Man, there are some really nasty people on this site.
Randolph is close, but not next door to Barcroft. Geez, I can look at a map, including the walk zone maps APS just put out. APS maps show that elementary school kids cannot cross Columbia Pike or George Mason. So, how can kids who live north of Columbia Pike and west of George Mason WALK to Randolph.
And, how does sending lower income kids from one poor performing school, to another another (and higher FR/L) poor performing school help them????
I think the better question is if you can somehow arrange options schools and boundaries so that only Randolph is a "bad" school instead of Carlin Spring, Randolph and Barcroft, is it worth it? That's 2 less schools of high poverty and one sacrificial lamb. So some kids are helped and some remain in the same (not great) situation. Yes, this is cynical, but I think it's part of the consideration.
DP. I don't think it's cynical or making Randolph a "sacrificial lamb" to acknowledge that we don't have the ability to help all three through this particular process and helping two without helping the third is still better overall than maintaining the status quo. Let's not let the perfect be the enemy of the good.
Making Carlin Springs an immersion option makes sense, since the current CS students can be absorbed into their "new" immersion school and get rezoned for a combination of Claremont and Ashlawn, both strong, low FARMs schools in their own right that can take on some ED students without tanking their own schools. You also help the arguably most "needy" school/students, as Carlin Springs is over 80% FARMs.
That same situation, unfortunately, does not hold for Barcroft. If you make that school an immersion option, there are no good options for where to rezone the current Barcroft students. The planning units that could be picked up by Fleet (i.e. Alcova Heights) are primarily comprised of MC families, so Fleet just becomes even more "healthy" than it already will be. (It might also push Fleet way over capacity from the get-go. Many of the Alcova Heights families that transfer away from Barcroft will likely jump at the chance to go to Fleet.) The planning units that could get rezoned for Barrett (i.e. southern part of Arlington Forest and northern part of Barcroft) are also mostly MC. So yes, you might reduce the FARMs rate at Barrett, but then you're essentially breaking up a S. Arlington neighborhood school to improve a N. Arlington neighborhood school. And the southern/western PUs of Barcroft would get moved where? To Randolph (which is already at 74% FARMs), or Claremont (which is already going to be picking up FARMs students from the old Carlin Springs?
All this upheaval/musical chairs, and for what gain? You would basically make the new Randolph the old Carlin Springs, but even poorer, and/or the new Claremont the old Barcroft.
Anonymous wrote:Barcroft parent here. We moved here when the bad principal was still there and choiced out bc she seemed terrible. There are so many kids who choice out, I literally know of one family on the block who sent there kids there. Same with alcova, they have a huge transfer rate as well. If the parents living in homes, UMC, gave the new principal a chance that School would be very different. It would be very balanced.
But if alcova is moved out, it will become like randiolph and hopelessly lopsided. That would be a disaster and believe me the UMC would leave, quickly. And this isn’t a race issue, the Barcroft UMC is ethnically diverse.
I would hope that the SB would do what the school needs to be a success for all its students, keep most of alcova, change the calendar, give the principal the resources to increase outreach to parents, and keep it neighborhood.
Anonymous wrote:If they get one immersion program (which I am not entirely opposed to) I pray that they follow the method at Claremont over key. I obviously only have first hand knowledge of Claremont, but from what I heard from key it is a very different program and is not nearly as inclusive to Claremont (my friend describes the population as segregated, which is not my experience at Claremont).
Anonymous wrote:Native Spanish speaker here - APS is really wrong in thinking that moving the immersion schools close to Latino families will make the families apply for the school. Many immigrant families want their kids in English speaking schools because they think it is best for their kids. Claremont is not far from Columbia Pike, it is a quick bus ride. Distance isn't the issue here, but alas this SB doesn't always listen.
Anonymous wrote:Will the Board do a survey asking Spanish speaking homes if they would be interested in attending an immersion school? That way they can at least determine if it makes sense to move the immersion school to a heavy Spanish speaking area.
I mean I don't know, I doubt the struggle to find native Spanish speakers now really has to do with a longer bus ride or a complicated application process. I think native speakers want their kids in English immersion all day.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So, if Barcroft and Carlin Springs are gone as a neighborhood schools, Randolph and Barrett (maybe) rises even further in FARMS. Ashlawn gets some more FARMS. If all Barcroft is sent to Randolph, APS can claim it only has one high FARMs elementary school.
I see that as a win win!
Sending Barcroft to Randolph isn't realistic in the least. Forcing Randolph, a high-poverty school (at 74% FARMs) to be even higher poverty AND overcapacity is not just mean-spirited, its downright cruel. It's also pretty good grounds (rightly so) for litigation. I sincerely hope you're joking.
I actually think they're going to break up Randolph a bit, too, not just move all the ED kids there, especially if Claremont becomes a neighborhood school. Barcroft neighborhood, with the exception of Buchanan Gardens, has very few ED students. If they take half the neighborhood to Randolph, they'd actually be adding MC families to that school zone.
And there are no ED students in the N half of the neighborhood, so moving them N to Barrett does the same thing. If they are doing this to break up segregated schools, then I have to believe they would move some of the less walkable PU's in Buckingham to Long Branch. They aren't walkable to either school, so bus them east instead of west.
I don't think they're going to do this unless they can decrease concentration of ED students at all the surrounding schools.
Makes sense in theory, but I don't see this working in practice. If there are so few ED kids living in the Barcroft neighborhood, why is the school high-poverty? Yes, a big chunk of the UMC families choice out, but the other half of the equation is that are still a lot of poor kids there. So where will the ED students go? With Campbell and Carlin Springs as option schools, that doesn't leave many neighborhood schools on the table. They can't all be absorbed by Claremont, especially with Carlin Springs becoming immersion. And they won't all want immersion. First generation Spanish speaking families have demonstrated repeatedly that Spanish immersion is not what they want. If you put them at Randolph, that exacerbates Randolph's poverty level. There is simply not a lot of neighborhood schools to "play" with here.
Similarly, many (all?) of the UMC families in the Barcroft neighborhood that DO attend Barcroft are walkers. Moving those families anywhere requires putting them on a bus. There goes that efficiency. And as long as those kids have to bus anyway, to schools with even HIGHER poverty rates no less (Randolph or Barrett) why wouldn't they join their brethren who have already abandoned ship (via option or private)?
Moving immersion to Barrett puts a lot more strategies to break up poverty on the table.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So, if Barcroft and Carlin Springs are gone as a neighborhood schools, Randolph and Barrett (maybe) rises even further in FARMS. Ashlawn gets some more FARMS. If all Barcroft is sent to Randolph, APS can claim it only has one high FARMs elementary school.
I see that as a win win!
Sending Barcroft to Randolph isn't realistic in the least. Forcing Randolph, a high-poverty school (at 74% FARMs) to be even higher poverty AND overcapacity is not just mean-spirited, its downright cruel. It's also pretty good grounds (rightly so) for litigation. I sincerely hope you're joking.
I actually think they're going to break up Randolph a bit, too, not just move all the ED kids there, especially if Claremont becomes a neighborhood school. Barcroft neighborhood, with the exception of Buchanan Gardens, has very few ED students. If they take half the neighborhood to Randolph, they'd actually be adding MC families to that school zone.
And there are no ED students in the N half of the neighborhood, so moving them N to Barrett does the same thing. If they are doing this to break up segregated schools, then I have to believe they would move some of the less walkable PU's in Buckingham to Long Branch. They aren't walkable to either school, so bus them east instead of west.
I don't think they're going to do this unless they can decrease concentration of ED students at all the surrounding schools.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So, if Barcroft and Carlin Springs are gone as a neighborhood schools, Randolph and Barrett (maybe) rises even further in FARMS. Ashlawn gets some more FARMS. If all Barcroft is sent to Randolph, APS can claim it only has one high FARMs elementary school.
I see that as a win win!
Sending Barcroft to Randolph isn't realistic in the least. Forcing Randolph, a high-poverty school (at 74% FARMs) to be even higher poverty AND overcapacity is not just mean-spirited, its downright cruel. It's also pretty good grounds (rightly so) for litigation. I sincerely hope you're joking.
Anonymous wrote:Not trying to throw another neighborhood under the bus, but thinking constructively here, a better immersion option than Barcroft would be Barrett.
It breaks up a high-poverty school (Barrett has an even higher poverty rate than Barcroft), is centrally located and close to transit, has a large contingent of Spanish-speaking students already in attendance (and in the walk zone), AND gives more flexibility for shifting boundaries around without exacerbating the ED imbalance. The displaced Barrett students could be zoned for Long Branch and Ashlawn (with potential trickle-down boundary changes for those schools if needed).
A downside is that Barrett has high walk-ability, but if the SB is trying to attract native Spanish speakers to immersion, then use that walkability to advance the cause to retain as many of the walkers (many Spanish-speakers) as possible.
Another downside is that the SB could be seen as trying to "improve" the (demographics) situation at North Arlington schools over South Arlington ones. The flip side is, S. Arlington gets to "keep" a neighborhood school it otherwise might not (Barcroft) and with a bit of help (calendar change, keeping Barcroft boundaries intact), might even improve. And balancing the demographics better (across north AND south) benefits the school system as a whole.