Anonymous wrote:Well it is a lot more than you get in FCPS.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is what happens when you concentrate poverty. I hope south Arlington parents do fight for charters. I'll be right there with them. My kid is just as deserving as a kid at Jamestown. A day of reckoning is at hand.
Yes, but if your child doesn't get a spot, you are in a worse position than you started in. Charters do not, by and large, have better outcomes than public schools, and getting a charter spot is not a guarantee.
Trust me, it can't get worse.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is what happens when you concentrate poverty. I hope south Arlington parents do fight for charters. I'll be right there with them. My kid is just as deserving as a kid at Jamestown. A day of reckoning is at hand.
Yes, but if your child doesn't get a spot, you are in a worse position than you started in. Charters do not, by and large, have better outcomes than public schools, and getting a charter spot is not a guarantee.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is what happens when you concentrate poverty. I hope south Arlington parents do fight for charters. I'll be right there with them. My kid is just as deserving as a kid at Jamestown. A day of reckoning is at hand.
I don't really understand the issues in Arlington, so am asking for clarification because to me Arlington represents a very successful county that has integrated schools all under one supervisory administration with a lot of variation and lottery placement without the use of Charters. It's one I look up to as a successfully run county school system. It's also a very wealthy county with a well reputed school system overall. Living in Fairfax, I'd take any school in Arlington over Fairfax's lowest performing schools any day.
The concentration of poverty is primarily a zoning/land use issue that people often don't realize affects school so they take their fight to the school level when really they should be taking their fight to land use. Charters can provide some redistribution of wealth in schools, but to make it better for all parts of living, land use is the better mechanism. Any over concentration of apartments especially those that are built at the same time will in time result in a concentration of poverty as those properties deteriorate. So if there are natural pockets of poverty, it is likely that it was created by land use decisions that kept some northern single family areas devoid of apartments and concentrated apartments in the southern area of Arlington. Lax laws and enforcement of overcrowding in housing especially when an area is inviting to illegal immigrants furthers this unevenness.
What I see in Arlington at the school level is a great effort to provide variety in school choice through lottery process. All schools in Arlington seem to have at least four choices to attend. At least 8 schools out of 20 just at the elementary level seem to be lottery schools. These include immersion, traditional, science focus, Montessori and then even with the other schools there are focusses on year round calendars, arts, and sciences. At the middle and high school level there are also lotteries and the option of applying to Thomas Jefferson which is a top rated school in the nation. Practically all of Arlington's schools have received awards and the budget per pupil is the envy of all the surrounding school systems.
If Arlington can't make their school system work without charters, I'm not sure there is any hope for the rest of the country. Do you really want money to be siphoned off for private schools or do you just want less concentration of poverty in the county?
Anonymous wrote:This is what happens when you concentrate poverty. I hope south Arlington parents do fight for charters. I'll be right there with them. My kid is just as deserving as a kid at Jamestown. A day of reckoning is at hand.
Anonymous wrote:This is what happens when you concentrate poverty. I hope south Arlington parents do fight for charters. I'll be right there with them. My kid is just as deserving as a kid at Jamestown. A day of reckoning is at hand.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Best candidates locally for charters are Alexandria City, South Arlington and Mount Vernon in Fairfax. Worst schools in NoVa.
I think you meant the most segregated schools in NoVa, at least that's the case in south Arlington. That's what happens when the school boards allows one of the smallest and wealthiest school systems in the area to remain segregated along socioeconomic lines. Some schools have PTA budgets over $100,000 and others don't even have PTA's. Throwing charters or vouchers into the mix will not help the schools with the highest percentage of children from low-income families. It may offer a "choice" or an "out" for a lucky few, but most students will be left behind at a school that now has even fewer resources. I think you know this and either don't care, or hope to punish certain people just for existing. We will fight you every step of the way.
Anonymous wrote:Best candidates locally for charters are Alexandria City, South Arlington and Mount Vernon in Fairfax. Worst schools in NoVa.
Anonymous wrote:I can't imagine her appointment having a huge impact on VA schools. For one, we don't have any charter schools in VA. Secondly, most FCPS schools are functioning so there's no reason for vouchers. I think most educational efforts are focused on reforming Title 1 and innercity schools. VA has been left pretty much unscathed by this wave of education reform and NCLB that's been going on for over a decade.