Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I teach at Lee. Because it’s a smaller school, there are more opportunities for leadership and actually making sports teams. We have thriving theater, chorus, and music programs. You can take Spanish, French, and Arabic. We do offer honors, AP, and IB courses. Nationally recognized library program, 1 to 1 computers, all IB candidates received the diploma last year (only school in FCPS to achieve this), the seniors this year received millions of dollars in scholarships and had 65+ students who graduated with 4.0+ GPAs. Test scores are on the rise, not spiraling downward. The ESOL population is shrinking, but ESOL students take ESOL classes until they are proficient enough to take standard or advanced level classes. Lee students are the same as Key students, so it is kind of funny that someone would be okay at Key but think Lee is somehow different.
Lee teacher, if you follow dcum you will notice there is one (or a few) posters who really want Lee to be shut down so that A) their neighborhood can be rezoned to South County or West Springfield OR B) 5 elementaries can be rezoned to West Springfield, and the West Springfield feeders rezoned to LB and South County, with the gleeful hope that WS scores will tank. They think this closure is supposed to happen very soon, based off a "gatehouse insider" who posts regularly that Lee is losing accreditation very soon.
None of this is necessarily backed by test scores, facts or the rezoning process that must be followed.
how would Lee lose accreditation based on what Lee Teacher has stated above?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I teach at Lee. Because it’s a smaller school, there are more opportunities for leadership and actually making sports teams. We have thriving theater, chorus, and music programs. You can take Spanish, French, and Arabic. We do offer honors, AP, and IB courses. Nationally recognized library program, 1 to 1 computers, all IB candidates received the diploma last year (only school in FCPS to achieve this), the seniors this year received millions of dollars in scholarships and had 65+ students who graduated with 4.0+ GPAs. Test scores are on the rise, not spiraling downward. The ESOL population is shrinking, but ESOL students take ESOL classes until they are proficient enough to take standard or advanced level classes. Lee students are the same as Key students, so it is kind of funny that someone would be okay at Key but think Lee is somehow different.
Lee teacher, if you follow dcum you will notice there is one (or a few) posters who really want Lee to be shut down so that A) their neighborhood can be rezoned to South County or West Springfield OR B) 5 elementaries can be rezoned to West Springfield, and the West Springfield feeders rezoned to LB and South County, with the gleeful hope that WS scores will tank. They think this closure is supposed to happen very soon, based off a "gatehouse insider" who posts regularly that Lee is losing accreditation very soon.
None of this is necessarily backed by test scores, facts or the rezoning process that must be followed.
how would Lee lose accreditation based on what Lee Teacher has stated above?
Anonymous wrote:I teach at Lee. Because it’s a smaller school, there are more opportunities for leadership and actually making sports teams. We have thriving theater, chorus, and music programs. You can take Spanish, French, and Arabic. We do offer honors, AP, and IB courses. Nationally recognized library program, 1 to 1 computers, all IB candidates received the diploma last year (only school in FCPS to achieve this), the seniors this year received millions of dollars in scholarships and had 65+ students who graduated with 4.0+ GPAs. Test scores are on the rise, not spiraling downward. The ESOL population is shrinking, but ESOL students take ESOL classes until they are proficient enough to take standard or advanced level classes. Lee students are the same as Key students, so it is kind of funny that someone would be okay at Key but think Lee is somehow different.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I teach at Lee. Because it’s a smaller school, there are more opportunities for leadership and actually making sports teams. We have thriving theater, chorus, and music programs. You can take Spanish, French, and Arabic. We do offer honors, AP, and IB courses. Nationally recognized library program, 1 to 1 computers, all IB candidates received the diploma last year (only school in FCPS to achieve this), the seniors this year received millions of dollars in scholarships and had 65+ students who graduated with 4.0+ GPAs. Test scores are on the rise, not spiraling downward. The ESOL population is shrinking, but ESOL students take ESOL classes until they are proficient enough to take standard or advanced level classes. Lee students are the same as Key students, so it is kind of funny that someone would be okay at Key but think Lee is somehow different.
Lee teacher, if you follow dcum you will notice there is one (or a few) posters who really want Lee to be shut down so that A) their neighborhood can be rezoned to South County or West Springfield OR B) 5 elementaries can be rezoned to West Springfield, and the West Springfield feeders rezoned to LB and South County, with the gleeful hope that WS scores will tank. They think this closure is supposed to happen very soon, based off a "gatehouse insider" who posts regularly that Lee is losing accreditation very soon.
None of this is necessarily backed by test scores, facts or the rezoning process that must be followed.
Anonymous wrote:I teach at Lee. Because it’s a smaller school, there are more opportunities for leadership and actually making sports teams. We have thriving theater, chorus, and music programs. You can take Spanish, French, and Arabic. We do offer honors, AP, and IB courses. Nationally recognized library program, 1 to 1 computers, all IB candidates received the diploma last year (only school in FCPS to achieve this), the seniors this year received millions of dollars in scholarships and had 65+ students who graduated with 4.0+ GPAs. Test scores are on the rise, not spiraling downward. The ESOL population is shrinking, but ESOL students take ESOL classes until they are proficient enough to take standard or advanced level classes. Lee students are the same as Key students, so it is kind of funny that someone would be okay at Key but think Lee is somehow different.
Anonymous wrote:The principal decided that anyone who failed an SOL (or was borderline, I forget) has to be enrolled in a support class for English/math. She hired extra math/reading teachers, raised class sizes for everyone, and cut languages/electives.
It really stinks because something like FACS or chorus is fantastic for a struggling/disengaged student to find value in school.
Anonymous wrote:This is at Key. I work at Key.
Lee should still have chorus (I hope), though I imagine enrollment may drop if kids aren't participating in middle school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm not sure it would be legal for them to do away with the chorus program from an equity point of view. And just one language? They are going the wrong direction.
Their website shows 3 music teachers, one is listed as an itinerant instructor. Wouldn't that mean he is part time/shared by schools.?
Yes, this year there was a part time chorus teacher, a part time orchestra teacher, and the band teacher taught at some feeder elementaries as well as Key.
The principal said that enrollment numbers for next year don't justify this many elective teachers.
There will be one section of French II next year for kids to continue. No new students will start French.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm not sure it would be legal for them to do away with the chorus program from an equity point of view. And just one language? They are going the wrong direction.
Their website shows 3 music teachers, one is listed as an itinerant instructor. Wouldn't that mean he is part time/shared by schools.?
Yes, this year there was a part time chorus teacher, a part time orchestra teacher, and the band teacher taught at some feeder elementaries as well as Key.
The principal said that enrollment numbers for next year don't justify this many elective teachers.
There will be one section of French II next year for kids to continue. No new students will start French.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm not sure it would be legal for them to do away with the chorus program from an equity point of view. And just one language? They are going the wrong direction.
Their website shows 3 music teachers, one is listed as an itinerant instructor. Wouldn't that mean he is part time/shared by schools.?