Anonymous wrote:A lot will depend on your budget and your commute.
Anonymous wrote:Kennedy has been amazing for the last two years and most people on this board don't give it the time of day. I recommend you tour the school yourself.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Kensington is a probably your best choice if you live in a neighborhood that feeds into the Bethesda-Chevy Chase or Walter Johnson HS clusters. Check the boundary maps at the MCPS website to get an idea of where to look.
Those neighborhoods can be expensive, so as a second bet you can either look at Rockville feeding into Richard Montgomery HS or Silver Spring feeding into Montgomery Blair HS. Both also good schools.
All schools in Montgomery County are diverse. Some are more diverse than others.
Boundary maps around Kensington are going to be redrawn in a few years when a new HS opens. I would focus on being in a neighborhood you like as school assignments are not set in stone.
Most likely WJ students would go to Woodward. I understand that some Einstein neighborhoods want to go to Woodward too but I guess that depends on the politics. Kensington doesn’t have the same clout that it used to.
That is the reason Woodward is being reopened, to relieve overcrowding at WJ and the DCC schools, mainly Einstein and Wheaton. It's not about any neighborhood "wanting to go to Woodward."
That’s not the reason. You have been posting this same nonsense for a long time.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Kensington is a probably your best choice if you live in a neighborhood that feeds into the Bethesda-Chevy Chase or Walter Johnson HS clusters. Check the boundary maps at the MCPS website to get an idea of where to look.
Those neighborhoods can be expensive, so as a second bet you can either look at Rockville feeding into Richard Montgomery HS or Silver Spring feeding into Montgomery Blair HS. Both also good schools.
All schools in Montgomery County are diverse. Some are more diverse than others.
Boundary maps around Kensington are going to be redrawn in a few years when a new HS opens. I would focus on being in a neighborhood you like as school assignments are not set in stone.
Most likely WJ students would go to Woodward. I understand that some Einstein neighborhoods want to go to Woodward too but I guess that depends on the politics. Kensington doesn’t have the same clout that it used to.
That is the reason Woodward is being reopened, to relieve overcrowding at WJ and the DCC schools, mainly Einstein and Wheaton. It's not about any neighborhood "wanting to go to Woodward."
Anonymous wrote:Moving to the dC Area this summer and will settling in somewhere in Montgomery County. Inwilm have a high schooler and middle schooler and Interested in Silver Spring, Kensington, Olney, Rockville areas . I know you have to take great schools.org with a grain of salt, but it’s important to have my kids in a diverse school where they can get a good educations. Any thought or advice would be appreciated.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Kensington is a probably your best choice if you live in a neighborhood that feeds into the Bethesda-Chevy Chase or Walter Johnson HS clusters. Check the boundary maps at the MCPS website to get an idea of where to look.
Those neighborhoods can be expensive, so as a second bet you can either look at Rockville feeding into Richard Montgomery HS or Silver Spring feeding into Montgomery Blair HS. Both also good schools.
All schools in Montgomery County are diverse. Some are more diverse than others.
Boundary maps around Kensington are going to be redrawn in a few years when a new HS opens. I would focus on being in a neighborhood you like as school assignments are not set in stone.
Most likely WJ students would go to Woodward. I understand that some Einstein neighborhoods want to go to Woodward too but I guess that depends on the politics. Kensington doesn’t have the same clout that it used to.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Kensington is a probably your best choice if you live in a neighborhood that feeds into the Bethesda-Chevy Chase or Walter Johnson HS clusters. Check the boundary maps at the MCPS website to get an idea of where to look.
Those neighborhoods can be expensive, so as a second bet you can either look at Rockville feeding into Richard Montgomery HS or Silver Spring feeding into Montgomery Blair HS. Both also good schools.
All schools in Montgomery County are diverse. Some are more diverse than others.
Boundary maps around Kensington are going to be redrawn in a few years when a new HS opens. I would focus on being in a neighborhood you like as school assignments are not set in stone.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Moving to the dC Area this summer and will settling in somewhere in Montgomery County. Inwilm have a high schooler and middle schooler and Interested in Silver Spring, Kensington, Olney, Rockville areas . I know you have to take great schools.org with a grain of salt, but it’s important to have my kids in a diverse school where they can get a good educations. Any thought or advice would be appreciated.
You couldn't pay me enough to live or send my kids to silver springs
Anonymous wrote:Moving to the dC Area this summer and will settling in somewhere in Montgomery County. Inwilm have a high schooler and middle schooler and Interested in Silver Spring, Kensington, Olney, Rockville areas . I know you have to take great schools.org with a grain of salt, but it’s important to have my kids in a diverse school where they can get a good educations. Any thought or advice would be appreciated.
Anonymous wrote:Kensington is a probably your best choice if you live in a neighborhood that feeds into the Bethesda-Chevy Chase or Walter Johnson HS clusters. Check the boundary maps at the MCPS website to get an idea of where to look.
Those neighborhoods can be expensive, so as a second bet you can either look at Rockville feeding into Richard Montgomery HS or Silver Spring feeding into Montgomery Blair HS. Both also good schools.
All schools in Montgomery County are diverse. Some are more diverse than others.