Families will pick WL to save money or when they are priced out of Yorktown. |
Let's be honest. No one moves to Arlington because they are looking for cheap housing. It's all relative, folks. |
Sorry but this has been disproved over and over again. The neighborhoods all over N Arlington are about equally expensive, and there are many relatively affordable neighborhoods in the Yorktown district like near the East Falls Church Metro, or in Westover and Garden City which have homes cheaper than those in nearby neighborhoods zoned to W-L. A few months ago a mom posted that her family was looking for a house near W-L, but ended up purchasing a small cape cod closer to Yorktown, because that was the house they could afford. |
| WL is a consolation prize |
| Look at an official APS high school neighborhood boundary map and you will see that most of the SFH neighborhoods that go into W-L are ridiculously expensive. No one is saving money by buying in the W-L district. I guess it's just impossible to convince some people that affluent families reside in the W-L district, that most of the rich kids in Lyon Village or Riverwood actually attend W-L (and not private schools), and that the school's population is on an upward trajectory for the foreseeable future (just look at the N Arlington elementary schools). |
| Waiting for the person to say the whites do well at wl |
Not the same type of housing |
It is. the large homes and lots in Riverwood are indistinguishable from similarly pricey neighborhoods in the Yorktown district. The small, Dominion Hills colonials and lots are the same size across the W-L/Yorktown boundary. The small, subsidized low-income garden apartments in Rosslyn are the same as those near Ballston. |
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While this thread lingers and festers, I see some completely contradictory themes: Rich kids in the W-L district only do private school; 99% of the rich kids in the W-L district go to W-L. W-L is a horrible school with very low test scores; W-L is a great school with good test scores and SATs. W-L's population is shrinking and the school is not popular; W-L's population is growing and Yorktown students are transferring into W-L. Houses in the W-L district are inexpensive; Houses in the W-L district are ridiculously expensive.
Too funny! |
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Even if W-L were down 30 students, 30 students out of the total population of the school is not especially significant. It could just mean that the class that just graduated is larger than the one coming in, or that each class is down overall by 7-8 people due to transfers or moves out of the area.
I'd be surprised if people with kids in ANY Arlington school were really bashing W-L. Not a single one of my friends with kids boundaried for W-L has expressed doubts about the school, and many folks buy there on purpose. We're in Yorktown, but I would have been fine with W-L. I just assume the basher is some weird troll who likes getting people all fired up. |
| Fuck that, all 90 scores for my kid especially if I am paying a million and a half |
This reminds me of conflicting posts about Lyon Village over the last few months: LV is not a desirable neighborhood at all; LV is the most desirable neighborhood in all of Arlington. LV is ugly and is nothing but teardowns; LV has lots of beautifully restored historic homes. LV has special dispensation to send kids to Yorktown; LV kids attend W-L which is only two blocks away... Classic DCMUM. |
Thank You! We return to reality. |
I was just pointing out that enrollment was down since the other poster seemed to be suggesting the demand for the area was such that W-L's enrollment was exploding. The growth seems to be more moderated. I think there's some rivalry between the CCH/Yorktown crowd and the Lyon Village/W-L set, as well as perhaps one poster from Fairfax who regularly goes off on W-L because there was someone in the Clarendon area who previously was very snide about Pimmit Hills and the Mosaic District area. If I'm right, it shows that you reap what you sow on anonymous forums. |
I think W-L parents are disillusioned and want to feel some type of justification for their decision for not going with Yorktown. Here is food for thought. Why are the scores so bad at W-L if the same mix of ESOL immigrants in fairfax county produce higher scores? |