Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It is understood that the FARMS/ESOL percentages are going to increase -- not because there are more FARMS/ESOL kids, but because there are fewer non-FARMS/non-ESOL kids. The FARMS/ESOL kids are the same ones would would have been there even if no re-zoning took place.
Jackson is going to look more like Falls Church HS. Not exactly like FCHS b/c Jackson will still draw kids for AAP. But, it is going to be lean more towards FCHS's numbers --- of course, that is to be expected b/c Jackson is, in fact, THE ONLY middle school feeder for FCHS. So, it really should be a reflection of FCHS!
Even with that demographic outcome -- which is really who FCHS kids are --- you will still have people who are very supportive and excited about LJMS b/c their kids are getting good teachers and they are doing very well (especially b/c of the AAP influence). Do you really think the reputation that has been built over the years is going to suddenly tank? It is not.
When you buy in FCHS pyramid, you are getting the FCHS-pyramid experience from MS on.
FWIW - regarding SATs, the white kids at Falls Church (which would be the same demographic as you will now see at Jackson) have average SAT scores on par with Hayfield, Centerville, Edison and others. It's not super great, but not bad either. (based on the scores posted on FCPS profiles).
So, yes, the school as a whole will seem more ESOL/FARMS, but those who aren't dealing with those challenges are doing o.k. Contrast that with the white kids at Lee -- who are scoring a full 100+ points lower (on average). It's not the same thing. Falls Church HS IS what you can expect at Jackson (after rezoning). You don't need to imagine doom and gloom. Jackson will be no worse than Falls Church HS for the non-AAP kids.... and on the whole, it will still look better than Falls Church HS b/c of the AAP bump.
This is incorrect. Poe is a split feeder to Annandale and Falls Church.
FCPS has turned Poe/Annandale from stable schools to schools where the poverty rates are shooting through the roof. It's crazy they've decided to replicate that at Jackson (the only difference being that Jackson will get a dwindling number of AAP kids from Thoreau, while Poe sends AAP kids to Frost and Glasgow).
Through its boundaries and AAP program, Jackson had shored up Falls Church HS, but that will come to an end. The only positives are the close-in location (Mosaic is less important than the proximity to Tysons and the Dunn Loring metro) and the fact that Falls Church HS is scheduled for a major renovation soon. Otherwise FCPS is killing that pyramid, just like it did to Annandale.
Genuinely curious, what evidence do you have that Jackson had shored up Falls Church HS?
I've lived in this area a very long time, and back in the day Jackson had an absolutely terrible reputation, much worse than that of Falls Church. Jackson's boundary was much the same as it was prior to the recent boundary changes, and it included the Oakton, Mosby Woods, and Marshall Road areas. Having those areas attend Jackson didn't help its reputation at all. What finally improved Jackson's reputation was adding the AAP center. I don't really feel like Falls Church's reputation has changed at all. If there are changes in Falls Church's reputation, they seem to depend on how strong the current principal is, not anything going on at Jackson.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It is understood that the FARMS/ESOL percentages are going to increase -- not because there are more FARMS/ESOL kids, but because there are fewer non-FARMS/non-ESOL kids. The FARMS/ESOL kids are the same ones would would have been there even if no re-zoning took place.
Jackson is going to look more like Falls Church HS. Not exactly like FCHS b/c Jackson will still draw kids for AAP. But, it is going to be lean more towards FCHS's numbers --- of course, that is to be expected b/c Jackson is, in fact, THE ONLY middle school feeder for FCHS. So, it really should be a reflection of FCHS!
Even with that demographic outcome -- which is really who FCHS kids are --- you will still have people who are very supportive and excited about LJMS b/c their kids are getting good teachers and they are doing very well (especially b/c of the AAP influence). Do you really think the reputation that has been built over the years is going to suddenly tank? It is not.
When you buy in FCHS pyramid, you are getting the FCHS-pyramid experience from MS on.
FWIW - regarding SATs, the white kids at Falls Church (which would be the same demographic as you will now see at Jackson) have average SAT scores on par with Hayfield, Centerville, Edison and others. It's not super great, but not bad either. (based on the scores posted on FCPS profiles).
So, yes, the school as a whole will seem more ESOL/FARMS, but those who aren't dealing with those challenges are doing o.k. Contrast that with the white kids at Lee -- who are scoring a full 100+ points lower (on average). It's not the same thing. Falls Church HS IS what you can expect at Jackson (after rezoning). You don't need to imagine doom and gloom. Jackson will be no worse than Falls Church HS for the non-AAP kids.... and on the whole, it will still look better than Falls Church HS b/c of the AAP bump.
This is incorrect. Poe is a split feeder to Annandale and Falls Church.
FCPS has turned Poe/Annandale from stable schools to schools where the poverty rates are shooting through the roof. It's crazy they've decided to replicate that at Jackson (the only difference being that Jackson will get a dwindling number of AAP kids from Thoreau, while Poe sends AAP kids to Frost and Glasgow).
Through its boundaries and AAP program, Jackson had shored up Falls Church HS, but that will come to an end. The only positives are the close-in location (Mosaic is less important than the proximity to Tysons and the Dunn Loring metro) and the fact that Falls Church HS is scheduled for a major renovation soon. Otherwise FCPS is killing that pyramid, just like it did to Annandale.
Anonymous wrote:It is understood that the FARMS/ESOL percentages are going to increase -- not because there are more FARMS/ESOL kids, but because there are fewer non-FARMS/non-ESOL kids. The FARMS/ESOL kids are the same ones would would have been there even if no re-zoning took place.
Jackson is going to look more like Falls Church HS. Not exactly like FCHS b/c Jackson will still draw kids for AAP. But, it is going to be lean more towards FCHS's numbers --- of course, that is to be expected b/c Jackson is, in fact, THE ONLY middle school feeder for FCHS. So, it really should be a reflection of FCHS!
Even with that demographic outcome -- which is really who FCHS kids are --- you will still have people who are very supportive and excited about LJMS b/c their kids are getting good teachers and they are doing very well (especially b/c of the AAP influence). Do you really think the reputation that has been built over the years is going to suddenly tank? It is not.
When you buy in FCHS pyramid, you are getting the FCHS-pyramid experience from MS on.
FWIW - regarding SATs, the white kids at Falls Church (which would be the same demographic as you will now see at Jackson) have average SAT scores on par with Hayfield, Centerville, Edison and others. It's not super great, but not bad either. (based on the scores posted on FCPS profiles).
So, yes, the school as a whole will seem more ESOL/FARMS, but those who aren't dealing with those challenges are doing o.k. Contrast that with the white kids at Lee -- who are scoring a full 100+ points lower (on average). It's not the same thing. Falls Church HS IS what you can expect at Jackson (after rezoning). You don't need to imagine doom and gloom. Jackson will be no worse than Falls Church HS for the non-AAP kids.... and on the whole, it will still look better than Falls Church HS b/c of the AAP bump.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The issues won't necessarily be visible the first year or two, but knowing what has happened in other FCPS schools, a change for the worse will creep in over the next five years. You just can't raise the F/R lunch percentage a bunch and expect there to be no consequences. The wild card for Jackson is the AAP program - that could keep it from falling off too far. It really depends on how many of the Thoreau AAP students choose the Jackson center over staying at Thoreau. So - rising F/R lunch numbers and a shrinking AAP program means the school will be different and test scores will eventually reflect that.
And why did the FCPS stop reporting the AAP numbers on the membership page? That could have provided some key information. It will also be interesting to see the F/R lunch rates when VDOE releases them. Jackson's enrollment dropped quite dramatically and much of that was likely non-F/R students - so the rate at Jackson will have jumped quite a bit.
And it is true, the decision has been made and it will never be reversed. So anybody upset about this can just drop it. Not trying to be rude, but FCPS would never go back.
I wouldn't get too excited about the Mosaic District helping out. Looks like that falls into the Fairhill ES school district. Fairhill has the lowest F/R rate (24.3%) of the schools feeding Falls Church, but the other elementary schools are Camelot (36.7%), Graham Road (86.1%), Pine Spring (65.2%), Westlawn (71.0%), and Woodburn (66.9%). Not seeing how the numbers at Jackson (43.4%) or Falls Church (57.6%) improve with those feeders.
Conjecture and hyperbole.
With a proven record from the past. Just look at Annandale.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The issues won't necessarily be visible the first year or two, but knowing what has happened in other FCPS schools, a change for the worse will creep in over the next five years. You just can't raise the F/R lunch percentage a bunch and expect there to be no consequences. The wild card for Jackson is the AAP program - that could keep it from falling off too far. It really depends on how many of the Thoreau AAP students choose the Jackson center over staying at Thoreau. So - rising F/R lunch numbers and a shrinking AAP program means the school will be different and test scores will eventually reflect that.
And why did the FCPS stop reporting the AAP numbers on the membership page? That could have provided some key information. It will also be interesting to see the F/R lunch rates when VDOE releases them. Jackson's enrollment dropped quite dramatically and much of that was likely non-F/R students - so the rate at Jackson will have jumped quite a bit.
And it is true, the decision has been made and it will never be reversed. So anybody upset about this can just drop it. Not trying to be rude, but FCPS would never go back.
I wouldn't get too excited about the Mosaic District helping out. Looks like that falls into the Fairhill ES school district. Fairhill has the lowest F/R rate (24.3%) of the schools feeding Falls Church, but the other elementary schools are Camelot (36.7%), Graham Road (86.1%), Pine Spring (65.2%), Westlawn (71.0%), and Woodburn (66.9%). Not seeing how the numbers at Jackson (43.4%) or Falls Church (57.6%) improve with those feeders.
Conjecture and hyperbole.
Anonymous wrote:The issues won't necessarily be visible the first year or two, but knowing what has happened in other FCPS schools, a change for the worse will creep in over the next five years. You just can't raise the F/R lunch percentage a bunch and expect there to be no consequences. The wild card for Jackson is the AAP program - that could keep it from falling off too far. It really depends on how many of the Thoreau AAP students choose the Jackson center over staying at Thoreau. So - rising F/R lunch numbers and a shrinking AAP program means the school will be different and test scores will eventually reflect that.
And why did the FCPS stop reporting the AAP numbers on the membership page? That could have provided some key information. It will also be interesting to see the F/R lunch rates when VDOE releases them. Jackson's enrollment dropped quite dramatically and much of that was likely non-F/R students - so the rate at Jackson will have jumped quite a bit.
And it is true, the decision has been made and it will never be reversed. So anybody upset about this can just drop it. Not trying to be rude, but FCPS would never go back.
I wouldn't get too excited about the Mosaic District helping out. Looks like that falls into the Fairhill ES school district. Fairhill has the lowest F/R rate (24.3%) of the schools feeding Falls Church, but the other elementary schools are Camelot (36.7%), Graham Road (86.1%), Pine Spring (65.2%), Westlawn (71.0%), and Woodburn (66.9%). Not seeing how the numbers at Jackson (43.4%) or Falls Church (57.6%) improve with those feeders.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I'd be furious if the school board was basing decisions on property values rather than the education and education setting of the students. You really, really need to move,get a hobby, find a new focus, talk to a therapist, etc. The decision is done and we are SO glad we picked LJ and we are also SO glad others did not.
Anonymous wrote:I think the long term prospects for Luther Jackson are good. The Mosaic District and the other building in the area will eventually have more middle class students to balance it out. Kilmer and Longfellow have neighborhoods that could easily be moved to LJ to help with their overcrowding.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:LJMS was seriously and dangerously overcrowded. There was no reasonable way to balance out FARMS numbers while reducing overcrowding. Hopefully they were able to anticipate staffing needs and not lose any of the great staff members. Thoreau would be better able to handle overcrowding after their renovation and due to their demographics.
On what planet do you think a school in FCPS loses that much of its enrollment without destaffing?
Anonymous wrote: