The new homes there are closer to $3m. |
Not OP, but Thanks for these details. Wow 20 percent? I knew people were leaving for private all over the region, but that’s a sobering statistic. Now what, another redistricting where they shift everyone north, or was the school already pretty overcrowded so that the attrition balanced it out? OP- you should be ok with “your” ES and the nearest ones if any of your kids are very very young. |
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So many Jamestown parents left for private. If you can afford it, please avoid APS. It’s going down hill fast. |
Discovery lost 100+ kids last year too to private. It would make sense to make one of the N. Arl school an option school since they are under capacity and the walking zones overlap in many cases. |
Why do you think that is? The overcrowding at the schools? Are they unable to attract good teachers? Is the entire system just poorly run? |
Distance learning when COVID closed schools. It was sub-par, to say the least; and they can afford to send their kids wherever they want. |
We left for Catholic School last year. DC's N Arlington elementary school called and emailed me several times to ask us if we'd consider returning. No kidding. |
They called you? That is fascinating. I thought they would be happy to get a bunch of families out from under APS given the overcrowding and all of the high density development and upzoning conversations. |
DP but we're at DES and although we lost 100 kids, we lost classes/teachers too. So for example instead of 4 classes in a grade, there's 3 - that are at full capacity. |
This. Plus the fact that they flat out stopped teaching ANYTHING in March 2020. Virtual learning was a joke. They're more concerned about renaming things then actually teaching kids. It's no longer the good school district it used to be. Save your money, move elsewhere and put your kid in private. |
This was a thing last year. They were supposed to call everyone who left to see if they planned on returning. |
This. I’m not surprised they called. If enough people were planning to send their kids back they would have needed to hire additional staff. Some people sucked up the expense of private for a couple of years to get through COVID but weren’t prepared to do it long term. |
Nottingham family here. New to the school in an early grade. There’s almost no diversity. I can’t even say what minority we are bc it might out me lol. I grew up in a non diverse school so it dies t bother me too much. What does bother me is that for all the “we don’t teach CRT in VA” stuff, my very young child seems to have learned a lot about race this January- far beyond the legacy of Dr. King. I don’t really care for it- he’s never had to think about race before and I don’t need him internalizing that there’s a legacy of treating people like him differently/badly. On the other hand, he’s learned about some inventors of color and was very inspired by that - that was nice and I do love to see in the classroom that there is a focus on highlighting the contributions of people of color and normalizing that people of color have made immense contributions in our history as a nation.
Class-size has been fantastic. Teacher has been fantastic. Kid has an IEP and the team has been fantastic. Principal knows me by name. Extended day has been fantastic. They seem to be reading, coding robots, and learning fractions. With the exception of reading, I did none of this in first grade so I am pretty impressed with them. I’m delighted people are pulling kids out and going to private because it means small class size for me! I have met snobby people at my bus stop, but in our classroom I have not met any snobby people. Fundraiser seem to be “eat here tonight and some money will go to the PTA” kind of things. The school just did a really nice STEAM night. Nottingham is the place to see and be seen when snow comes. All the kids are at the sledding hill. So far there seems to be a great community, at least in our grade. I’m very happy we are here. |
But that’s not really how it works out. If they allow 25 in a class and the school loses 100 kids, there are STILL 25 in a class. There are just 4 fewer classes. I’m a teacher at another N Arl elementary and our school overall is the smallest it’s been in years. Yet I have the largest class I’ve had since 2016 this year. |