You're not subtle about it. We can tell, and it says more about you as a person than anyone else. |
OP is looking for Kindergarten, not PK. Still unlikely for K though. Ross is also basically straight down 16th street from Crestwood. Totally doable for a good school experience. |
19 seats? Come uptown and we’ll show you what 25 in K looks like. Plenty of room for some OOB. Haha. |
Yes, 2 recesses during regular day, plus outside time in aftercare. |
| Lowell school. |
Lamb is not a community school. |
It’s a straight shot down 16th if either parent works DT. |
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OP if you want a community school stick with Powell. It’s heavily in bound students and people seem happy there.
LAMB does just one recess a day, and, like others said, it’s a charter so has students from a bunch of neighborhoods. CMI has a great playground and prioritizes outdoor time but the overall school experience is really uneven. I know a lot of families who have moved or lottoried to get out of CMI. |
| John Eaton for a long time was Crestwood's de facto neighborhood school. |
So Powell does two recesses? If I were you I'd list LAMB. Then West, Powell, etc. |
That is correct about LAMB having students from a bunch of neighborhoods. But there are a fair number of families in Crestwood and even more in 16th St. Heights and Petworth. But at most, there will be maybe 3 spots for K. But its a lottery, so somebody has to get those spots! Lots of "buts" there, as it is with many charters. |
| OP, it is incredible short sighted to choose a school for the next 6 years based on whether your kindergartner will have two recesses. Please think about upper grades as you order your preferences. They come faster than you can imagine. |
And if that is your priority, just go to a private school. Really. |
This. Especially to consider a school like CMI where most every person I know is going crazy to get out of the school. |
| I would say don't obsess over recess per se, and ask yourself what your quest for it really means. Are you worried about exercise, movement, not seeing kindergarteners bent over worksheets all day, school's attention to nutrition and health. Then ask the school about those priority of yours more broadly. If all they mention is one slim sliver of recess on a slab of concrete, then that's a problem. But you may hear them talk about moving in the classroom, taking time away from desks, periods of activity, PE classes and what they do there etc. |