Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have doubts that they are going to lie to the entire inaugural population of the school. They said the model will be interdisciplinary learning with integration of traditional subjects and special pathways and had a sample pod set up to show what they meant. They are adapting to the space - they aren't going to gut the entire school to make a rows and rows of square classrooms, they are going to adapt the model to the facilities. I honestly saw very little that will need to be renovated. I think they will size classes to fit the spaces. Based on the turnout - I think they are going to have plenty of opts in and no one will be disrupted who doesn't want to be. The only ones they may lose are the sports-centric kids.
Then you didn't see the cafeteria(s) or library, did you? Or the gym without high school sized bleachers.
Or the lack of locker space
Or the classrooms that can't fit 30 people. It's no where near fitting 1000 students as is. That will require additoinal buildings or turning 1 of the 3 gyms into classroom space. I can see this project balooning out of control cost wise.
NP. I don't believe the school will open in the Fall.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have doubts that they are going to lie to the entire inaugural population of the school. They said the model will be interdisciplinary learning with integration of traditional subjects and special pathways and had a sample pod set up to show what they meant. They are adapting to the space - they aren't going to gut the entire school to make a rows and rows of square classrooms, they are going to adapt the model to the facilities. I honestly saw very little that will need to be renovated. I think they will size classes to fit the spaces. Based on the turnout - I think they are going to have plenty of opts in and no one will be disrupted who doesn't want to be. The only ones they may lose are the sports-centric kids.
Then you didn't see the cafeteria(s) or library, did you? Or the gym without high school sized bleachers.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have doubts that they are going to lie to the entire inaugural population of the school. They said the model will be interdisciplinary learning with integration of traditional subjects and special pathways and had a sample pod set up to show what they meant. They are adapting to the space - they aren't going to gut the entire school to make a rows and rows of square classrooms, they are going to adapt the model to the facilities. I honestly saw very little that will need to be renovated. I think they will size classes to fit the spaces. Based on the turnout - I think they are going to have plenty of opts in and no one will be disrupted who doesn't want to be. The only ones they may lose are the sports-centric kids.
Then you didn't see the cafeteria(s) or library, did you? Or the gym without high school sized bleachers.
Or the lack of locker space
Or the classrooms that can't fit 30 people. It's no where near fitting 1000 students as is. That will require additoinal buildings or turning 1 of the 3 gyms into classroom space. I can see this project balooning out of control cost wise.
We’ll see what’s to come.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have doubts that they are going to lie to the entire inaugural population of the school. They said the model will be interdisciplinary learning with integration of traditional subjects and special pathways and had a sample pod set up to show what they meant. They are adapting to the space - they aren't going to gut the entire school to make a rows and rows of square classrooms, they are going to adapt the model to the facilities. I honestly saw very little that will need to be renovated. I think they will size classes to fit the spaces. Based on the turnout - I think they are going to have plenty of opts in and no one will be disrupted who doesn't want to be. The only ones they may lose are the sports-centric kids.
Then you didn't see the cafeteria(s) or library, did you? Or the gym without high school sized bleachers.
Or the lack of locker space
Or the classrooms that can't fit 30 people. It's no where near fitting 1000 students as is. That will require additoinal buildings or turning 1 of the 3 gyms into classroom space. I can see this project balooning out of control cost wise.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have doubts that they are going to lie to the entire inaugural population of the school. They said the model will be interdisciplinary learning with integration of traditional subjects and special pathways and had a sample pod set up to show what they meant. They are adapting to the space - they aren't going to gut the entire school to make a rows and rows of square classrooms, they are going to adapt the model to the facilities. I honestly saw very little that will need to be renovated. I think they will size classes to fit the spaces. Based on the turnout - I think they are going to have plenty of opts in and no one will be disrupted who doesn't want to be. The only ones they may lose are the sports-centric kids.
Then you didn't see the cafeteria(s) or library, did you? Or the gym without high school sized bleachers.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have doubts that they are going to lie to the entire inaugural population of the school. They said the model will be interdisciplinary learning with integration of traditional subjects and special pathways and had a sample pod set up to show what they meant. They are adapting to the space - they aren't going to gut the entire school to make a rows and rows of square classrooms, they are going to adapt the model to the facilities. I honestly saw very little that will need to be renovated. I think they will size classes to fit the spaces. Based on the turnout - I think they are going to have plenty of opts in and no one will be disrupted who doesn't want to be. The only ones they may lose are the sports-centric kids.
Then you didn't see the cafeteria(s) or library, did you? Or the gym without high school sized bleachers.
Anonymous wrote:I have doubts that they are going to lie to the entire inaugural population of the school. They said the model will be interdisciplinary learning with integration of traditional subjects and special pathways and had a sample pod set up to show what they meant. They are adapting to the space - they aren't going to gut the entire school to make a rows and rows of square classrooms, they are going to adapt the model to the facilities. I honestly saw very little that will need to be renovated. I think they will size classes to fit the spaces. Based on the turnout - I think they are going to have plenty of opts in and no one will be disrupted who doesn't want to be. The only ones they may lose are the sports-centric kids.
Anonymous wrote:FWIW, I was a FARMS student growing up and these days my annual comp package is over 7-figures with incentive comp so there might a few bright kids in this group of misfits no one wants. Never can tell.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think the farms rate will very low based on what I saw at the open house. What’s the farms rate of TJ? That’s what I saw.
The FARMs rate will be about 25%, McNair and Coates are moving to Western and they are both high FARMs rate schools. I would guess that most of the people at the open house came from Crossfield, Floris, Oak Hill, and Fox Mill with fewer people coming from McNair and Coates.
Yes, eventually. It will be lower at first when it’s based on the opt-ins. That will make some of the Carson families happy. Then it will inch up over time.
LOL. You seem very anxious to promote that.
About a third of Coates's FARMS will be at Herndon High. They already go to Herndon. It will be fine. Like Carson. And, Coates numbers have been going down every year on FARMS.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think the farms rate will very low based on what I saw at the open house. What’s the farms rate of TJ? That’s what I saw.
The FARMs rate will be about 25%, McNair and Coates are moving to Western and they are both high FARMs rate schools. I would guess that most of the people at the open house came from Crossfield, Floris, Oak Hill, and Fox Mill with fewer people coming from McNair and Coates.
Yes, eventually. It will be lower at first when it’s based on the opt-ins. That will make some of the Carson families happy. Then it will inch up over time.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think the farms rate will very low based on what I saw at the open house. What’s the farms rate of TJ? That’s what I saw.
The FARMs rate will be about 25%, McNair and Coates are moving to Western and they are both high FARMs rate schools. I would guess that most of the people at the open house came from Crossfield, Floris, Oak Hill, and Fox Mill with fewer people coming from McNair and Coates.
Anonymous wrote:I think the farms rate will very low based on what I saw at the open house. What’s the farms rate of TJ? That’s what I saw.