Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think I would be fine with ATS being moved to the old Patrick Henry site- as long as it's open to south Arlington kids first and any left over slots can go north.
Wouldn't that defeat the purpose of moving a choice school south?
Not if it serves almost exclusively south Arlington kids. Relieves our overcrowding and gives us an out from neighborhood schools.
South Arlington needs seats. Moving ATS doesn't solve this problem. Moving Montessori opens space up at Drew.
It does if ATS is only used by south Arlington
But if ATS weren't a county -wide school anymore, wouldn't it just be another south Arlington school?
Just another south Arlington school... For middle class kids to choice into and out of their neighborhood school.
We are talking about assuring south Arlington parents that their kids can choice out of their local school.
I'm not sure how to spell it out any clearer.
As of now - there is so much crowding in south Arlington, there are fewer possibilities to choice out. We aren't worried about trailers. We are worried our kids are stuck in slow moving, sol focused classrooms.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hoffman Boston is the de facto ASFSS. no need another one. no thanks.
You are missing the point.
what's the point? it has STEM focus and everyone can choice in. what else do you want?
Not everyone can choice in. Hoffman-Boston is only open to that neighborhood and to kids zoned to Drew. Other South Arlington neighborhoods don't have a STEM choice.
are you sure you can't transfer in? ask the school admin, don't rely on internet.
I'm going off of what the School Board says which schools you can attend/apply for a lottery based on where you live: http://www.apsva.us/page/3008
School transfers are very limited now due to so many schools being at or over capacity. I'm talking about a choice school that is widely open for South Arlington families that has a FARM rate under 40%.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hoffman Boston is the de facto ASFSS. no need another one. no thanks.
You are missing the point.
what's the point? it has STEM focus and everyone can choice in. what else do you want?
Not everyone can choice in. Hoffman-Boston is only open to that neighborhood and to kids zoned to Drew. Other South Arlington neighborhoods don't have a STEM choice.
are you sure you can't transfer in? ask the school admin, don't rely on internet.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hoffman Boston is the de facto ASFSS. no need another one. no thanks.
You are missing the point.
what's the point? it has STEM focus and everyone can choice in. what else do you want?
Not everyone can choice in. Hoffman-Boston is only open to that neighborhood and to kids zoned to Drew. Other South Arlington neighborhoods don't have a STEM choice.
are you sure you can't transfer in? ask the school admin, don't rely on internet.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hoffman Boston is the de facto ASFSS. no need another one. no thanks.
You are missing the point.
what's the point? it has STEM focus and everyone can choice in. what else do you want?
Not everyone can choice in. Hoffman-Boston is only open to that neighborhood and to kids zoned to Drew. Other South Arlington neighborhoods don't have a STEM choice.
are you sure you can't transfer in? ask the school admin, don't rely on internet.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hoffman Boston is the de facto ASFSS. no need another one. no thanks.
You are missing the point.
what's the point? it has STEM focus and everyone can choice in. what else do you want?
Not everyone can choice in. Hoffman-Boston is only open to that neighborhood and to kids zoned to Drew. Other South Arlington neighborhoods don't have a STEM choice.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think I would be fine with ATS being moved to the old Patrick Henry site- as long as it's open to south Arlington kids first and any left over slots can go north.
Wouldn't that defeat the purpose of moving a choice school south?
Not if it serves almost exclusively south Arlington kids. Relieves our overcrowding and gives us an out from neighborhood schools.
South Arlington needs seats. Moving ATS doesn't solve this problem. Moving Montessori opens space up at Drew.
It does if ATS is only used by south Arlington
But if ATS weren't a county -wide school anymore, wouldn't it just be another south Arlington school?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hoffman Boston is the de facto ASFSS. no need another one. no thanks.
You are missing the point.
what's the point? it has STEM focus and everyone can choice in. what else do you want?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hoffman Boston is the de facto ASFSS. no need another one. no thanks.
You are missing the point.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think I would be fine with ATS being moved to the old Patrick Henry site- as long as it's open to south Arlington kids first and any left over slots can go north.
Wouldn't that defeat the purpose of moving a choice school south?
Not if it serves almost exclusively south Arlington kids. Relieves our overcrowding and gives us an out from neighborhood schools.
South Arlington needs seats. Moving ATS doesn't solve this problem. Moving Montessori opens space up at Drew.
It does if ATS is only used by south Arlington
Anonymous wrote:Here's a thought. ATS, Claremont and Key are choice schools and they are already mixed in terms of demographics. If ASFS being a "special" school is causing so many problems, why don't you take away the extra science education and just have it be the regular neighborhood school that it mostly is. Most people at this point probably aren't buying there for the science; they're buying there because the test scores are high and it's close-in to DC and Clarendon, and they're not interested in Key immersion.
Then you could put another "choice" school in South Arlington, giving preference to South Arlington addresses. Then put a science/tech magnet program into one of the South Arlington middles and into Wakefield.
That, plus more affordable housing along Lee Hwy or wherever else, should help balance things a bit. But you're never going to get a truly integrated county. Wherever you go in this country (and others), there are richer and poorer areas. In my Kansas hometown, there are richer, whiter schools and poorer schools with more FARMS and more minorities. The real estate in the richer school boundaries is expensive for the area and almost solely SFH. The poorer schools include lots of apartments, townhouses and smaller, older homes in their boundaries. I think it's just harder for people here to accept that even if they're spending $500K on a house, that doesn't put them in the richer school boundary, because anywhere else, $500K is a lot of money.
Anonymous wrote:Hoffman Boston is the de facto ASFSS. no need another one. no thanks.