Yes, some of the boundaries created decades ago are wonky. But let's hope they avoid those situations this time around. |
HAHA, thats funny!! |
My kids both had great experiences at Whitman. The new principal seems great. |
That's a very small area. Also, WJ is likely to look and feel different after boudary change. It won't be old WJ. |
OP, the W high schools are essentially interchangeable in that they have good academic and extracurricular opportunities, strong peer groups if your kid is a striver, and are large. All high schools in the County follow the same curriculum.
In your shoes I’d put my commute first and foremost - living near Wootton HS compared to Whitman HS will be a large difference in “nearby” work commutes. |
This! Everyone is acting like people said that majority of students at Churchill are like this. That's not what was said, it's just that Churchill has a significant number of students like this compared to the other W schools. Yes, it is mostly affluent suburban kids, but about 1/8 of the students are country/rural. People forget that there are pockets of rural and working-class families in Churchill's cluster. Also, people are ignorant as to what high schools in Texas are like. Plenty of them mix upper-middle-class Asian Americans and white students with a small country feel, much like Churchill. It's not just Texas, but other southern states too. Johns Creek in GA is similar. |
It's not a small area - it is a 2 mile radius around WJ, which, incidentally, includes Woodward. |
The 2 mile radius is a general guideline, but there are many cases where a HS walk zone is smaller than that. Rule of thumb: if your neighborhood currently has school bus stops, you're not inside the walk zone and would be subject to a boundary change. |
Or, if your neighborhood is within two schools' walk zones, such as between WJ and Woodward, you could also have a boundary change. |
I think that will apply to a lot of HS after the boundary changes. |
Yes, regular affluent suburban kids wear expensive name brand clothing, accessories, drive expensive cars, and have the $$$ to buy designer drugs. I moved from a "regular affluent suburban" area out west, and that was the HS. No, thank you. My kids have a mix of friends - some who are more affluent than others. We are in the middle. They realize they are more fortunate than some, and not as fortunate as others. Still, my youngest DD seems to want more and more crap, go on shopping sprees, etc. (It old her to get a job, and she has). If DD went to a wealthy W school, she'd want even more expensive crap. |
My kids friends at Churchill have allowances that are big. Like $ 500 to $750 a week. And credit cards and debit cards no limit. But there is no charity. So you will get invited to expensive activities and you are paying your fair share.
My kid has a friend with a 750 square foot bedroom. I had to look it up. She 4,000 sft finished basement for parties. Its interesting. Also makes you feel poor at same time. |
And I’m a parent of 2 Churchill kids. We live in a small (rented) townhouse. We thrift a lot of clothes and buy little. Both kids have part time jobs for spending money and no allowance, though I’m happy to contribute a few dollars here and there. Yes, they have rich friends who invite them to their pools and huge houses, but it’s never been an issue. Adults let money get in the way much more than kids. There are rich and poor kids at every school. The W’e are not an exception. |
Forget about Churchill or WJ, Watkins Mill is where you should take your kid.
Source: Trust me. |
I think it's funny the assumptions people are making about Texas schools. |