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OP asked about the quality of the school and school community, not whether you think a neighborhood is boring or not. What does that have to do with the OP?
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| since the yellow line is going to go further north in a few months, Mt. P to the Pentagon will be an easier commute than most of Upper NW...you can walk to Columbia Heights and have a straight shot. But if you don't want Spanish immersion it's not a good fit. Also, if the parent working at the Pentagon is coming in as a political, there may be a mismatch in values between most Bancroft families and the OP's. |
You think all of the Red Line DC neighborhoods feel like strip malls and suburbs but somehow Del Ray — literal definition of a suburb— doesn”t? |
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Budget is very important here.
The Capitol Hill elementary schools are great— Ludlow-Taylor, Maury, Chisholm, Payne, Brent (though they’re in a swing space for 2 years), and the neighborhood is wonderful. But your money is not going to go as far as the burbs and you’ll have less space. The trade off (particularly commute/walking/proximity to H, Eastern Market, downtown) is worth it to many but it’s pricey. |
S/he thinks MtP is expensive but not Capitol Hill? |
I have been on CH for decades. Raised kids on CH. Currently have kid in charter for MS and one in application HS. Lottery and application luck has worked out for us. But the post above has been said by parents on CH since the day we moved in. If your kid is already in 1st grade and you are not planning on private as a backup, moving to CH is parental malpractice. I know this won't be well received by DCUM CH folks, but it is truth. The stress of not knowing what to do for MS, of applying to Latin and BASIS for 5th (undermining the "community" aspect), of getting to 7th or 8th grade and wondering is you have sentenced your kid to Eastern HS, it all happens fast. I love my house. I love my neighborhood. But if I was moving to DC with a 1st grader I'd sure as heck be moving IB for Deal/JR or Hardy/MacArthur. |
| disagree. the capitol hill middle schools are okay (arguably better than upper elementary was in at least some respects). the middle school years go super fast, but people who stayed dcps through 8th mostly ended up at a mix of dcps application and private high schools. buy-in at eastern is slowly growing but its far from the only option. |
I know several families that chose the IB program at Eastern. They seem to be reasonably happy with it. |
Seems nuts to say Capitol Hill is a snore and then suggest Del Ray. I don’t mind Del Ray, but it’s not exciting and certainly far more of a snore than the heart of Capitol Hill and also how close you are to H Street and other downtown places. |
| John Eaton, hands down, best place for so many reasons, especially staff and families |
Definitely. |
| My husband used to commute to a job near the pentagon from Mt Pleasant. It was pretty miserable, 395 gets super backed up heading into DC. If you can find a place zoned for Lyon Park elementary in Arlington, that has a nice community, is walkable and is a short commute to the pentagon. |
This has to be someone who has never spent time in Capitol Hill. There are a few parts of NW I like a lot (including Cleveland Park and the area around the Eaton IB), but from my house in CH, I can walk to Union Market, H Street and Eastern Market in 20 minutes; the idea that Palisades or Spring Valley or Forest Hills is less of a “snore” is literally insane. There are many places where you can’t walk to anything other than a single road of random shops in 20 minutes. |
The Pentagon has a metro stop, so any place near a metro could work if you’re OK using metro. |
| Is having a more exciting neighborhood more important than having good schools? |