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No more 7A schools in AL
Posted on 1/23/26 at 2:53 pm
Posted on 1/23/26 at 2:53 pm
Posted on 1/23/26 at 2:57 pm to Crimson Wraith
Private schools are about to be dominate as hell
Posted on 1/23/26 at 3:08 pm to Crimson Wraith
Looks like they're still keeping the 32 team format for 6A.
It'll be interesting to see how it works out. Seems like private schools were winning a lot recently, so I guess that's why they made the change.
It'll be interesting to see how it works out. Seems like private schools were winning a lot recently, so I guess that's why they made the change.
Posted on 1/23/26 at 3:57 pm to Woody4daTide9
quote:
Private schools are about to be dominate as hell
Private schools will play in their own league going forward.
Posted on 1/23/26 at 4:09 pm to KingOfTheWorld
Spend more time developing players, games should be secondary. That's how Europeans approach youth soccer.
Posted on 1/23/26 at 4:33 pm to RollTide4Ever
One of those “2A” private school regions goes from Huntsville to Auburn. I had heard no whisper of this before today. Is it a push by public school coaches?
Posted on 1/23/26 at 5:28 pm to Crimson Wraith
I wonder how much money Pinson Valley and Clay paid off AHSAA to keep them out of 6A
Posted on 1/23/26 at 5:31 pm to KingOfTheWorld
The will still play public schools. Only the playoffs will be different
Posted on 1/23/26 at 5:49 pm to Vulcan Materials
quote:
I wonder how much money Pinson Valley and Clay paid off AHSAA to keep them out of 6A
Both have never been close to being top 32 by enrollment. The cutoff was Buckhorn at 1032. Clay is sitting at 952, Pinson at 740.
LINK
Posted on 1/23/26 at 6:47 pm to Crimsontide1713
Putting Prattville in the region with the B'ham area schools instead of the Montgomery/Auburn area schools that are 30 minutes away is stupid as hell.
Posted on 1/23/26 at 7:18 pm to Woody4daTide9
quote:
The will still play public schools. Only the playoffs will be different
Madison Academy entering a world of shite now that they can't beat up on various small county high schools.
Posted on 1/24/26 at 8:08 am to Woody4daTide9
quote:
Private schools are about to be dominate as hell
How?
Posted on 1/24/26 at 8:13 am to Crimson Wraith
Anyone else associated with a private a school? What is your opinion? I think I’m most worried of schedule changes to the regular season if the public schools just flat out decide to not play the private schools from a commute perspective.
My wife deals with the band so I am curious what this will do to impact my Friday nights.
My wife deals with the band so I am curious what this will do to impact my Friday nights.
Posted on 1/24/26 at 8:15 am to bbeck
When you fix a problem that didn't need to be fixed.
So dumb.
So dumb.
Posted on 1/24/26 at 8:32 am to McGregor
quote:
When you fix a problem that didn't need to be fixed. So dumb.
Public and private institutions have separated in Tennessee athletics for a while. They still play each other in the regular season, so it doesn’t really affect travel much and I think it’s a more fair system because public and private schools are materially different.
Posted on 1/24/26 at 8:52 am to TomRollTideRitter
I think this is not as necessary now in Alabama, but I think it will be in the future. You can sort of sense that the political trade winds are trending towards a movement that ultimately results in a redirection of tax revenue from public education towards private institutions.
It is not hard to imagine an atrophying of public school athletics in more urbanized areas as private institutions use robust athletics programs as a means to attract customers as subsidization and/or redirection of tax revenue increases the demand-side for private education. This may even happen in more rural counties but I'm confident this will happen in urbanized areas because it already really exists. Government incentivization would just be Miracle Grow on that market.
It is not hard to imagine an atrophying of public school athletics in more urbanized areas as private institutions use robust athletics programs as a means to attract customers as subsidization and/or redirection of tax revenue increases the demand-side for private education. This may even happen in more rural counties but I'm confident this will happen in urbanized areas because it already really exists. Government incentivization would just be Miracle Grow on that market.
Posted on 1/24/26 at 9:38 am to Crimson Wraith
NC just went from 4A to 8A this year. It was needed when 4A before ranged from 1200 students to over 3000 in the cities like Charlotte. Each division has 60 teams in it I believe now. There are some private schools that compete in public school leagues and playoffs but they have to meet certain conditions(supposedly). The majority of private schools paly in a different league/playoffs that goes 1A t0 4A.
Posted on 1/24/26 at 9:45 am to Diego Ricardo
quote:
I think this is not as necessary now in Alabama, but I think it will be in the future. You can sort of sense that the political trade winds are trending towards a movement that ultimately results in a redirection of tax revenue from public education towards private institutions.
In NC public schools have seen a decline in enrollment over the last decade even with large population growth. Most of the decline here is due to homeschooling. Chapel Hill schools has seen an 8% drop over the last few years. The more recent issues are the state is issuing vouchers to families to attend private schools now based on income and more public charter schools are popping up.
As long as public education continues to be micromanaged with the focus chasing numbers and not learning the decline in public schools will continue to enrollment decline.
Posted on 1/24/26 at 10:05 am to TideWarrior
quote:
As long as public education continues to be micromanaged with the focus chasing numbers and not learning the decline in public schools will continue to enrollment decline.
Yes. I think public education from the top down needs to deemphasizing macro-level metrics for success.
1. You can mostly predict "success" by just surveying the census demographics for the tracts that the school serves.
2. There is variability even within a demographic year-to-year. I would have been valedictorian of my brother's class full of cut ups but was barely in the top 10 of my own class.
School systems, especially in high school, waste a lot of instructional time taking tests due to various federal and state mandates to evaluate the school's performance. Reality is the school is going to perform relative to the quality of the inputs (the children) and the educators at the macro-level just don't matter all that much. Your child will have some good ones and some bad ones but it will balance out to a zero sum w/r/t educator quality. Your child's success starts in the home in terms of genes and upbringing.
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