Not strange at all. While many public high schools in suburban areas outside major cities often exceed 1,000 to 2,000 students, the median size across the US is much lower. Average public school enrollment for high schools grades 9-12 is about 520 students. |
most school districts are smaller than ours here too. and arlington doesn't have land for more schools. |
Large county run school districts are the norm throughout the southeastern US. Further west and from Pennsylvania northward school districts are smaller, except for the big city ones. |
Lol, they are indeed massive!! If you are coming from smaller or mid sized towns. My HS in the was less than 1000. |
FCC is much more suburban than Ballston … |
OP here. If we go with W-L that would describe our lives! It is what I am strongly leaning towards. But if Yorktown or Wakefield has a better way to make the school feel less giant (current MS has 400 kids) then I might consider something slightly more suburban!! |
OP here. Ballston and FCC are very different. At the end of the day my bigger concern is insularity at Meridian. |
So they skip out on the bus home, how are they getting home? Mom and dad or a student with a car picks them up. No teenager is taking the ART at 5pm. Ballston is a so-so mall, with a few ground level shops and a target, and a LOT of office buildings. Its not really urban in the vibrant community way. |
I wouldn't consider Ballston a mall any longer. Maybe a failed mail. But it has a successful ice rink, food hall, and other places kids eat. No one's kidding themselves that Ballston is vibrant 14th Street or Union Market, etc. Ballston, Clarendon, Roslyn are vibrant communities with shops (Clarendon mainly), eateries, cultural institutions (MOCAA-Museum of Contemporary Art Arlington), robust public transit, diverse and dense housing types, etc. W-L upperclassmen do take advantage of open lunch and walk to/from Ballston to eat. Students do in fact take the public bus or subway after dark. |
OP, does your kid do any sports? While most of the teams are super competitive and hard to make, cross country is no cut and could be a good way for yours to meet others. It starts in August before the actual school year, too. There are also other extracurricular activities and clubs. It will likely be tough to meet people at first - your kid will have to put themselves out there, which I know many teens never want to do. I don’t think any of the high schools have anything to make them feel smaller, tbh. |
It is so pretentious that people in FCC pretend like the only transient population in FCC and FCCPS consists of foreign service and their kids. Everything OP has posted suggests they’d be happiest in an area like Penrose zoned to Wakefield. |
Wait why wouldn’t a teen take a bus? |
No not into sports but said he was willing to try cross country! |
| OP where are you from that you are already so familar with the differences between ballston and fcc? Are you local? That might help drive this discussion. |
| For most families new to the area, they are choosing HS by home prices. Is that not a factor? |