Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You what will never demise? This thread.
Grammar atrocities?
bad texting?
bad voice to text?
drunk posting?
I hope not. They all bring me joy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You what will never demise? This thread.
Grammar atrocities?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You what will never demise? This thread.
Grammar atrocities?
Anonymous wrote:You what will never demise? This thread.
Anonymous wrote:You what will never demise? This thread.
Anonymous wrote:I wish APS would hire a completely disinterested party to just do the math based on unbiased enrollment projections and have them propose boundaries without emotional baggage. They could draw up 2 or 3 maps that would incorporate and/or omit possible option moves. There is a lot of distrust for staff projections and proposals at this point, but there must be someone out there who is trained to solve this kind of numbers puzzle whom we could hire, right?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I wish APS would hire a completely disinterested party to just do the math based on unbiased enrollment projections and have them propose boundaries without emotional baggage. They could draw up 2 or 3 maps that would incorporate and/or omit possible option moves. There is a lot of distrust for staff projections and proposals at this point, but there must be someone out there who is trained to solve this kind of numbers puzzle whom we could hire, right?
Those really awful projections for the Discovery boundaries were produced by an outside consultant, so I don’t know why people assume a consultant would be better predicting the future than the staff is. It’s not exactly a precise science.
Right. People move. People go to or leave private. Arlington is full of parents who think they know better than everyone else when it comes to school related issues. If they don't like the APS decision, there must have been something sinister going on behind the scenes.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I wish APS would hire a completely disinterested party to just do the math based on unbiased enrollment projections and have them propose boundaries without emotional baggage. They could draw up 2 or 3 maps that would incorporate and/or omit possible option moves. There is a lot of distrust for staff projections and proposals at this point, but there must be someone out there who is trained to solve this kind of numbers puzzle whom we could hire, right?
Those really awful projections for the Discovery boundaries were produced by an outside consultant, so I don’t know why people assume a consultant would be better predicting the future than the staff is. It’s not exactly a precise science.
Anonymous wrote:I wish APS would hire a completely disinterested party to just do the math based on unbiased enrollment projections and have them propose boundaries without emotional baggage. They could draw up 2 or 3 maps that would incorporate and/or omit possible option moves. There is a lot of distrust for staff projections and proposals at this point, but there must be someone out there who is trained to solve this kind of numbers puzzle whom we could hire, right?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have seen some of these accusations about APS employees from McKinley parents on our listserve. It's really pretty awful.
You raise a great point about option schools drawing disproportionately from their surrounding schools. Should really be the response to these "Save McKinley" types who claim there aren't going to be enough empty seats at Ashlawn and Reed to make sure they never have to experience overcrowding (a very selfish argument, if you ask me--since much of the county is past that point). But I digress. The point is, won't putting ATS there mean that Reed neighborhood families may be more likely to enroll in ATS than before. And therefore, there will be enough empty seats to satisfy them?
Serious question - I thought McKinley, Ashlawn, and Glebe were some of the most overcrowded schools. They are definitely more overcrowded than most of the NA schools. Are many schools more overcrowded than those three?