Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There is a parent orientation meeting upon entering ATS and HB reminding parents they made this choice because of educational style, not elite-ism. There is a power point with 10
or so different ways to diffuse any arguments about the rest of Arlington paying for their special program and neighborhood-specific points on why their local school just doesn’t “suit” their precious dumpling.
My kid isn’t at either of those schools, but who cares? Arlington County wastes so much money. Who would
complain about a public school that people seem to love in light of all the garbage that gets approved by our County Board. If anything, this program should be expanded at other schools to give more families a chance to benefit. There’s clearly a demand. Parents who want to take a stand on tucked in shirts or music class need not apply.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
My kid isn’t at either of those schools, but who cares? Arlington County wastes so much money. Who would
complain about a public school that people seem to love in light of all the garbage that gets approved by our County Board. If anything, this program should be expanded at other schools to give more families a chance to benefit. There’s clearly a demand. Parents who want to take a stand on tucked in shirts or music class need not apply.
If you want to do something, start by learning the difference between the School Board and the County Board.
Then you can figure out whose neighborhood school you take away so you can put another ATS in there.
Anonymous wrote:
My kid isn’t at either of those schools, but who cares? Arlington County wastes so much money. Who would
complain about a public school that people seem to love in light of all the garbage that gets approved by our County Board. If anything, this program should be expanded at other schools to give more families a chance to benefit. There’s clearly a demand. Parents who want to take a stand on tucked in shirts or music class need not apply.
Anonymous wrote:There is a parent orientation meeting upon entering ATS and HB reminding parents they made this choice because of educational style, not elite-ism. There is a power point with 10
or so different ways to diffuse any arguments about the rest of Arlington paying for their special program and neighborhood-specific points on why their local school just doesn’t “suit” their precious dumpling.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think what rubs me the wrong way specifically about ATS and HB is that if their curriculum is so award winning and spectacular (and "Blue Ribbon, whatever that means), why can't they be implemented system wide instead of to the lucky subset of kids who just get lucky?
Because if you give my kindergartner homework or insist he has to be reading to be promoted to K, I am going to call BS. I am not going to force my kid to play an instrument. I do not GAF about tucked in shirts.
I would like to be sure all APS kids get RAN screening. I have opted my kids out of SOLs when the teacher was obsessed with scores (my kids do fine on standardized tests; I just don't want their education focused on their scores).
Anonymous wrote:I think what rubs me the wrong way specifically about ATS and HB is that if their curriculum is so award winning and spectacular (and "Blue Ribbon, whatever that means), why can't they be implemented system wide instead of to the lucky subset of kids who just get lucky?
Anonymous wrote:I think what rubs me the wrong way specifically about ATS and HB is that if their curriculum is so award winning and spectacular (and "Blue Ribbon, whatever that means), why can't they be implemented system wide instead of to the lucky subset of kids who just get lucky?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There is a parent orientation meeting upon entering ATS and HB reminding parents they made this choice because of educational style, not elite-ism. There is a power point with 10
or so different ways to diffuse any arguments about the rest of Arlington paying for their special program and neighborhood-specific points on why their local school just doesn’t “suit” their precious dumpling.
Where on earth did you hear that? It's not true.
Anonymous wrote:There is a parent orientation meeting upon entering ATS and HB reminding parents they made this choice because of educational style, not elite-ism. There is a power point with 10
or so different ways to diffuse any arguments about the rest of Arlington paying for their special program and neighborhood-specific points on why their local school just doesn’t “suit” their precious dumpling.
Anonymous wrote:There is a parent orientation meeting upon entering ATS and HB reminding parents they made this choice because of educational style, not elite-ism. There is a power point with 10
or so different ways to diffuse any arguments about the rest of Arlington paying for their special program and neighborhood-specific points on why their local school just doesn’t “suit” their precious dumpling.
Anonymous wrote:There is a parent orientation meeting upon entering ATS and HB reminding parents they made this choice because of educational style, not elite-ism. There is a power point with 10
or so different ways to diffuse any arguments about the rest of Arlington paying for their special program and neighborhood-specific points on why their local school just doesn’t “suit” their precious dumpling.