No, my math isn't off. You've made specific life choices to have three kids and live in a house that is a stretch for you. |
No one is asking for anything for free. We all all paying taxes to support the schools and all our kids should get equal opportunities. There are enough kids to take the advanced classes but there ae also more average kids than advanced and the prinicipals choose to use their allocations on the average kids vs. doing a mix good for all. |
By free, I mean putting the time, work and effort. Not necessarily just the money you pay. Yeah maybe you and a number of other families at your school do put in the work for your kids to succeed and make it possible for them to take these advanced classes. But not enough families at your school are either willing or able to do so. So resulting in there not being enough students for the principal to justify the advanced class at your school. So your choice is stay in the home where you bought as much home as you could. Or make it a priority that your kids would be surrounded by high performing students and it would be less likely a question if they'd have access to these classes. A lot of families that are in the Wootton area, and other similar schools, chose the latter, where schools were the number one priority and criteria in choosing where to live. Obviously there's a different popular line of thought on this forum. Where it used to be commonly posted, "It's all one district with one curriculum" Maybe not as recent but in the more recent past it was, "Buying a home does not guarantee what school you go to" or something like that. But again for a lot of families in these areas, schools were the major criteria and the reason why they were willing to pay what they did for where they live. |
If you look at this document, the max MPDU rental rate for a one bedroom in high rise with someone with a max annual salary of $80500 is $1680/month: https://www.montgomerycountymd.gov/DHCA/Resources/Files/housing/affordable/publications/mpdu/calculate_rental_rates.pdf This rental in Rio island assigned to Wootton is $1628/month: https://www.redfin.com/MD/Gaithersburg/eaves-Washingtonian-Center/apartment/22011115 This townhome is for sale for $675000: https://www.redfin.com/MD/Rockville/554-Monet-Dr-20850/home/10518574 This recently listed home now under contract listed for $785000: https://www.redfin.com/MD/Rockville/2892-Balmoral-Dr-20850/home/10510799 And these apartments not in Rio island are about $2500/month: https://www.redfin.com/MD/Rockville/Avalon-at-Traville/apartment/22011398 The homes in Wootton aren't necessarily inaccessible. But a lot of the pricing is because you're paying for the schools. For example instead of paying $785000 for a 1830 square foot 60 year old single family home listed above, you chose to buy this new build home for $800k recently under contract: https://www.redfin.com/MD/Montgomery-Village/9759-Stewartown-Rd-20886/unit-P45/home/196137281 You're paying more in property taxes. But you also chose to go for the newer and bigger home and most likely didn't take schools as much into account. Or if you want something closer, this home in the Lakelands: https://www.redfin.com/MD/Gaithersburg/528-Market-Mews-E-20878/home/11183064 Not much bigger. But newer and gets the amenities of being in a preplanned development if you like that kind of thing. Living in the Wootton school district isn't out of reach. But you can definitely get more for the money if you live elsewhere. But people choose to pay the money to live in the Wootton school district because of the reputation of its schools. So they may settle for the smaller or older home. And even if you're paying the same amount in property taxes, you probably have a lot more house for the money or some features that you really like that would've cost a lot more if it was in an area zoned for a W school. |
The principal has their priorities and no matter what we ask for its always a no. I don't think its worth paying a few hundred thousand more for a few classes when that money is better spent on college and grad school. No one cares where you go to high school. |
Wootton is a school, MCPS is the school district. Wootton has had some serious issues in the past five years. I wouldn't pay that much to send my child there, especially after the rape. |
Not DP, but thank you for the thoughtful reply. A couple reactions: 1. On the bolded, the issue is that this is not a current day phenomena. It may be true that there was a point when the students at Wootton had appreciably more parents putting in the "work and effort" to prepare their kids for advanced classes. But in the current day, it is entrenched reality that the opportunities are not available at other schools. This then becomes a circular self-reinforcing disparity. Students in 2025 zoned for Wootton benefit from more opportunity REGARDLESS of whether their parents put in "work and effort." It just comes to them. 2. Second, you know it is a HUGE overgeneralization, and likely not the reality for the majority of the GHS population, that the students are there because their parents made the choice to buy a big house on a large piece of land. Yes, they got "as much house as they could" but that was a result of simply finding an affordable house (or rental). I do have empathy for families that choose the Wootton area because they believed their children would go to particular school in a particular place with a particular set of benefits and amenities, and now that might change. They can feel that they are not getting what they "purchased" or planned. I get that. But that feeling is not different from somebody objecting to homes being built on a vacant lot because they expected the wide-open view from their backyard, or objecting to a new roadway or transit going in because it brings "traffic." People should know that change is always possible, and often GOOD for the overall public, even though it impacts what they thought they were entitled to. |
| What an absolutely bang-on real life example of the old maxim that C students rule the world. I know one of the developers who got multiple windfalls off these neighborhoods whose house in FL is probably half the size of OldWootton. And the elected officials here have everyone by the short hairs. Then the Wootton parents who by all accounts did everything right by the book and sacrificed so their kids could run around with robots and take 50 APs instead of 49 are getting their identity ripped up like an old newspaper. Not saying it’s fair. Just saying my goodness what a case study in life. |
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The comments yesterday were pretty crazy. Yes it’s frustrating to lose your school but it’s the reality of the current situation.
Enrollment may not necessitate the need for Wootton for 10-15 years. If that happens it could be reopened just like Woodward was done. |
"over my dead body".. that was wild. |
You kind of missed my point though. Also when I originally posted listings I was just looking at homes close to Wootton, if you look at the Stone Mill neighbhorhood, townhomes are/were listed for about around $475k: https://www.redfin.com/MD/North-Potomac/10602-Chisholm-Landing-Ter-20878/home/10623205 Which coincidentally in the first round of options, this was the section that MCPS was proposing to send to Crown while the million dollar SFH section of the neighborhood stayed in Wootton. (Great job MCPS!) So even if the imbalance between schools is there now, there are affordable homes in the Wootton area for families to choose if that's what they want. The price of entry is less than $500k if someone is willing to settle for a townhouse, instead of getting a little bit more elsewhere. But again, don't complain if it turns out that the academic rigors and opportunities aren't there in the location that had more house for the money. The school ratings and rankings are easily accessible. Not everyone digs into school data like what's on mdreportcard. But the superficial ratings are always there. US News, Great Schools and Niche and they're often posted in blurbs on the news. And it's commonly stated that these ratings are just a reflection of test scores (and SES) and not the total picture of the school that parents need to take into account when choosing where to live. Which is somewhat true. But look what people are saying now, our students are struggling to meet proficiency standards and it is an issue. So test scores do matter somewhat. So if parents really did care about academics and wanted their kids to have access to the more advanced classes, the cost of entry into the Wootton school district isn't that high relative to costs in other areas of Montgomery County. They might've had to choose a $475k townhouse instead of a single family home somewhere else. But the families in these areas chose the smaller homes because the fact is even Wootton does have these issues, it is one of the highest performing schools and it does give access to these classes. If families say they don't want their kids in the schools due to the pressure cooker environment, rich kid discipline and drug problems, etc, etc. It just means they value other things over academics and is fine. But again, don't complain if the school in the area they chose isn't the same or have the same offerings due to the overall student performance. And granted $475k and $2k/month may still be out of reach for some families. But honestly in Montgomery County as a whole, this is on the cheaper end. And it's a big issue with how MCPS is segregated by income levels. And the solution is not to mix up the demographics just so the low performing numbers are not as apparent. But a lot of posters on here attacking Wootton parents are also saying that they make the same income as Wootton families but choose to live elsewhere. If they chose not to prioritize academics and picked somewhere else, don't complain saying how they don't have the same access to the classes because they did have the opportunity. My points are: -Wootton isn't necessarily this rich exclusive area that some posters on here are making it out to be -families in the Wootton area made the sacrifice they did to put their kids in "good" schools. They didn't ask to exclude anyone. Other people want the same access? Great come on over. If they can't afford to buy for now, they can rent. There are a lot of rentals available and the rentals in those areas with $500k townhomes are a bit more affordable. $2500/month for a 3 bedroom townhome: https://www.redfin.com/MD/North-Potomac/14603-Devereaux-Ter-20878/home/10622862 That's cheaper than some two bedroom apartments in Montgomery County. So try to have some understanding on why Wootton families as resistant to the change. |
And this is exactly the point of view I'm referring to. Not everyone has the same point of view but this poster explicitly states that they decided it wasn't worth it to them to pay the extra money for access to the school for that few classes. A lot of families in the Wootton school cluster did decide to make that choice. So don't penalize them because they determined high school (and earlier) education is important. It's okay, because just like how it's finally apparent that there are inequalities across schools in the same school system, people will finally realize the problem starts at the beginning. And first focus on improving foundations and proficiency levels in elementary schools, to make sure students can succeed academically in high school and afterwards. |
I thought the star spangled sweatshirt crew was gonna break out into a conga line of We're Not Gonna Take It by Twisted Sister. |
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Several posters commented that it’s been predetermined, that it was always going to happen regardless etc…
So MCPS is asking for people to do the surveys, to come to the town halls for community meetings and engagement, to put comments in about specific solutions they would like to see-for what? To be performative? If they have always been and are still 100% with this it honestly would have been better for them to not do the surveys at all/not have all the conversation going on about it and to just basically be like-this is what’s going to happen. Because now if they go through with this they are doing so without the community support AFTER they asked for their input. It creates a distrust and honestly makes it seem like they just wasted everybody’s time and effort when they had no intention of listening or making changes. A very very small minority in the Wootton community support moving to Crown. The petition (which I know doesn’t matter but i’m just mentioning for a numbers standpoint) has over 4k signatures. I know there have been a couple comments from Wootton parents saying they support it but again, based on everything we are seeing and hearing in the cluster-it’s overwhelmingly against it. So I really hope they listen. Because I just don’t think it’s any organization’s best interest to push something through like this after so much opposition. |
I think the surveys make sense for some decisions out of the hundreds being made with the boundary study. This one is just not one of those. Not every decision is Ask the Audience. |