Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A relatively high performing, economically homogeneous high school can do well with an enrollment of 2700 or more. That is the case at schools like New Trier in Winnetka. It won’t be the case at W-L and parents will be increasingly unhappy with how their average kids fall through the cracks there in the future.
With the current demographic balance W-L should do well at 2700 students or 1000 students, or 3,000 students, etc. If the balance were to shift and APS were to rezone more single family home neighborhoods away from W-L to Yorktown to account for population growth in the southern part of the county, then yes, average kids may fall through the cracks.
That’s literally what’s happening. They are moving Wakefield units to WL and YHS IB transfers are shrinking— this year there were many rejections in fact.
1. Not surprised about this.
2. How do you know this?
If true it’s a shame APS is using IB to reduce overcrowding at Wakefield. The IB program at W-L was not designed for that. The lottery based admissions system was designed to give all 8th graders a fair chance at entry.
Hasn’t it always been true that everyone got into IB who survived through the last minute ridiculous waitlist? Like, they were letting in kids the day before schools started? Is this going for be the first year they don’t? If so, is it only YHS kids who are being excluded? This seems deeply wrong to a handful of kids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A relatively high performing, economically homogeneous high school can do well with an enrollment of 2700 or more. That is the case at schools like New Trier in Winnetka. It won’t be the case at W-L and parents will be increasingly unhappy with how their average kids fall through the cracks there in the future.
With the current demographic balance W-L should do well at 2700 students or 1000 students, or 3,000 students, etc. If the balance were to shift and APS were to rezone more single family home neighborhoods away from W-L to Yorktown to account for population growth in the southern part of the county, then yes, average kids may fall through the cracks.
That’s literally what’s happening. They are moving Wakefield units to WL and YHS IB transfers are shrinking— this year there were many rejections in fact.
1. Not surprised about this.
2. How do you know this?
If true it’s a shame APS is using IB to reduce overcrowding at Wakefield. The IB program at W-L was not designed for that. The lottery based admissions system was designed to give all 8th graders a fair chance at entry.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A relatively high performing, economically homogeneous high school can do well with an enrollment of 2700 or more. That is the case at schools like New Trier in Winnetka. It won’t be the case at W-L and parents will be increasingly unhappy with how their average kids fall through the cracks there in the future.
With the current demographic balance W-L should do well at 2700 students or 1000 students, or 3,000 students, etc. If the balance were to shift and APS were to rezone more single family home neighborhoods away from W-L to Yorktown to account for population growth in the southern part of the county, then yes, average kids may fall through the cracks.
Wishful thinking on your part. The balance is already shifting.
The demographic balance at W-L has been stable for many years even with neighborhood rezonings—those are the facts—and we won’t know if it is currently shifting until the next two years or so. But if APS keeps moving affluent neighborhoods away from the school to balance enrollment then of course new challenges would eventually emerge after a tipping point.
Neighborhoods with involved parents, where kids grow up through the system, provide stability and an environment where average kids can also succeed. APS should really strive to balance enrollment and demographics at all three high schools.
The priorities have changed however, and balanced demographics across APS may just be wishful thinking. I’m still surprised that the Courthouse and Rosslyn neighborhoods are still zoned to Yorktown and not the much closer W-L. They were already rezoned from Williamsburg MS to the closer Dorothy Hamm, so a rezoning to W-L may be on the horizon.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A relatively high performing, economically homogeneous high school can do well with an enrollment of 2700 or more. That is the case at schools like New Trier in Winnetka. It won’t be the case at W-L and parents will be increasingly unhappy with how their average kids fall through the cracks there in the future.
With the current demographic balance W-L should do well at 2700 students or 1000 students, or 3,000 students, etc. If the balance were to shift and APS were to rezone more single family home neighborhoods away from W-L to Yorktown to account for population growth in the southern part of the county, then yes, average kids may fall through the cracks.
Wishful thinking on your part. The balance is already shifting.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A relatively high performing, economically homogeneous high school can do well with an enrollment of 2700 or more. That is the case at schools like New Trier in Winnetka. It won’t be the case at W-L and parents will be increasingly unhappy with how their average kids fall through the cracks there in the future.
With the current demographic balance W-L should do well at 2700 students or 1000 students, or 3,000 students, etc. If the balance were to shift and APS were to rezone more single family home neighborhoods away from W-L to Yorktown to account for population growth in the southern part of the county, then yes, average kids may fall through the cracks.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A relatively high performing, economically homogeneous high school can do well with an enrollment of 2700 or more. That is the case at schools like New Trier in Winnetka. It won’t be the case at W-L and parents will be increasingly unhappy with how their average kids fall through the cracks there in the future.
With the current demographic balance W-L should do well at 2700 students or 1000 students, or 3,000 students, etc. If the balance were to shift and APS were to rezone more single family home neighborhoods away from W-L to Yorktown to account for population growth in the southern part of the county, then yes, average kids may fall through the cracks.
That’s literally what’s happening. They are moving Wakefield units to WL and YHS IB transfers are shrinking— this year there were many rejections in fact.
1. Not surprised about this.
2. How do you know this?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A relatively high performing, economically homogeneous high school can do well with an enrollment of 2700 or more. That is the case at schools like New Trier in Winnetka. It won’t be the case at W-L and parents will be increasingly unhappy with how their average kids fall through the cracks there in the future.
With the current demographic balance W-L should do well at 2700 students or 1000 students, or 3,000 students, etc. If the balance were to shift and APS were to rezone more single family home neighborhoods away from W-L to Yorktown to account for population growth in the southern part of the county, then yes, average kids may fall through the cracks.
That’s literally what’s happening. They are moving Wakefield units to WL and YHS IB transfers are shrinking— this year there were many rejections in fact.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A relatively high performing, economically homogeneous high school can do well with an enrollment of 2700 or more. That is the case at schools like New Trier in Winnetka. It won’t be the case at W-L and parents will be increasingly unhappy with how their average kids fall through the cracks there in the future.
With the current demographic balance W-L should do well at 2700 students or 1000 students, or 3,000 students, etc. If the balance were to shift and APS were to rezone more single family home neighborhoods away from W-L to Yorktown to account for population growth in the southern part of the county, then yes, average kids may fall through the cracks.
That’s literally what’s happening. They are moving Wakefield units to WL and YHS IB transfers are shrinking— this year there were many rejections in fact.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A relatively high performing, economically homogeneous high school can do well with an enrollment of 2700 or more. That is the case at schools like New Trier in Winnetka. It won’t be the case at W-L and parents will be increasingly unhappy with how their average kids fall through the cracks there in the future.
With the current demographic balance W-L should do well at 2700 students or 1000 students, or 3,000 students, etc. If the balance were to shift and APS were to rezone more single family home neighborhoods away from W-L to Yorktown to account for population growth in the southern part of the county, then yes, average kids may fall through the cracks.
Anonymous wrote:A relatively high performing, economically homogeneous high school can do well with an enrollment of 2700 or more. That is the case at schools like New Trier in Winnetka. It won’t be the case at W-L and parents will be increasingly unhappy with how their average kids fall through the cracks there in the future.
Anonymous wrote:A relatively high performing, economically homogeneous high school can do well with an enrollment of 2700 or more. That is the case at schools like New Trier in Winnetka. It won’t be the case at W-L and parents will be increasingly unhappy with how their average kids fall through the cracks there in the future.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My Midwestern high school in the 90's had 2,400 kids and it was fine. 2,700 is big but not ridiculous. Nobody wants to move out of W-L because they think Yorktown is too rich/white and Wakefield is too poor/brown. So this is what you get.
Sure but midwestern campus would have cheap and ample land for right size buildings and field space. And sure, 2400 is the schools current size, but 2700 is the future, likely eventually 3000
And Evanston Township High School, which is not rural at all, is 3700. You do what you can with the space available
https://www.eths.k12.il.us/domain/220
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My Midwestern high school in the 90's had 2,400 kids and it was fine. 2,700 is big but not ridiculous. Nobody wants to move out of W-L because they think Yorktown is too rich/white and Wakefield is too poor/brown. So this is what you get.
Sure but midwestern campus would have cheap and ample land for right size buildings and field space. And sure, 2400 is the schools current size, but 2700 is the future, likely eventually 3000