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Advanced Academic Programs

Friday, March 1, 2013

Fairfax County Advanced Academics Study Takes Shape

Board members wrestle with community surveys, system expansion as they give nod to staff study, which will be completed in June.

The Fairfax County School Board is continuing to weigh what advanced academics mean in the system, authorizing a scope of study Thursday night it hopes will provide better information about how and where services are delivered now — both in the county and across the country — and how that might improve in the future. The study was spurred by a discussion last fall on whether the school system should expand its Advanced Academic Program Centers, a move many vocal parents said needed further analysis and community dialogue. While the board voted in January to expand the centers to three additional elementary schools this fall, to relieve overcrowding, they stopped short of expanding across about a dozen and a half more elementary and middle …

Thursday, November 29, 2012

Parents and Faculty Discuss Planned Expansion of Advanced Academic Centers

Fairfax County Public Schools has asked the community for feedback on recommendations to increase the number of AAP centers in the county.

Around 75 parents and teachers attended the second of three scheduled community meetings on Wednesday night at Lee High School in Alexandria to discuss Fairfax County Public Schools (FCPS) recommendations for expanding its Advanced Academic Level IV Centers. The meeting, which focused on schools in clusters 4 and 5, included a brief powerpoint presentation (see at right) from FCPS officials that outlined some of the explanation behind the recommendations to open a Level IV center at every middle school and create six additional Level IV elementary centers in pyramids without a center. The recommendations also hope to address overcrowding at the three current centers at Haycock (Cluster 1, McLean pyramid), Louise Archer (Cluster 2, Madison …

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