Thank you very much for the helpful and more importantly *specific* advice. I'm feeling very overwhelmed by all of the logistics. |
OP - if the job is a great opportunity for you, then you should take it. But 'free' PK3 and PK4 is not no-cost. Coming into the lottery cycle late, there are slots available but they may be far from where you decide to live or work. The school day is short, compared to a work day or day care -- generally 8:45-3:00. Anything outside of this will require you paying for a babysitter, or using whatever aftercare is available at your school. Depending on teh school this can be very affordable (the Title 1 schools with large numbers of economically disadvantaged families) or very pricey. Look at the DCPS SY calendar. https://dcps.dc.gov/publication/2017-2018-traditional-calendar There are lots of days off sprinkled through the school year, and the school-based after care isn't often available on these days, not to mention winter, spring and summer vacation. Run the numbers for these days you will need child care, and you may find that staying in full-time day care is a better deal. |
I don't have a kid in those grades so can't say, but it faces the same challenges of any Title I school with the twist that it's in an area that is already pretty economically diverse and more gentrification is coming. The housing stock is less friendly than some neighborhoods to older kids and bigger families, but there are townhouses and many seem to be changing hands from seniors to younger people with kids. There are a lot of little kids in the neighborhood and relatively few charter schools close by (especially with Eagle Academy closing its Ward 6 campus). So all the ingredients are there for larger and more diverse enrollment. The principal and teachers seem nice. The PTA is active and seems to be doing better than some other schools in reflecting the interests not just of rich white parents of 3 year olds (who deserve a say too of course, just not all the say). Some of the older kids who go there seem really sweet, based on their behavior at the playground, library, community garden, etc. And some have really atrocious behavior. The school is not Brent or Janney. It probably won't ever be. But a lot of people seem to be doing good things there. |
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OP has not specified where they're coming from, which is why a wish to live in DC seems relatively uninformed. I say this as someone whose suburban friends are always on-edge about visiting us in our neighborhood (Bloomingdale) and constantly tell us our kid is getting a sub-par education (we are OOB at a desirable DCPS that is EOTP).
If OP is not prepared for the urban experience (i.e., exposure to property crime, random gunfire), and explaining homeless panhandlers to your kids, then I'm not sure DC is the place for them. |
Im overseas at the moment and was asked this a few weeks ago. "We are from D.C. too! Where in DC do you live? Maryland or Virginia? We reside in Silver Spring!" I had to bite my tongue from saying anything snarky. |