Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I personally would buy where you can get a house and not worry about which ES. I feel like its 6 of one, half a dozen of the other.
+1000 So much time wasted here worrying about which school to pick. Your kid is coming from a high-income, college-educated family. They’ll be fine in whatever elementary school they attend.
How do you know? You don't know my child and what they need (and what I want for them), I do.
High SES background doesn't have direct causal influence on a child's outcomes. It's a proximal factor. Part of the reason kids from high SES families do well is because their parents worry and help select an environment they believe their child will thrive in.
I think you're clueless from this comment: "Also wondering if WFES is a better bet for getting into AAP, if DC tuens out to be a good fit for that."
Educate yourself - almost 10 years later this is still one of the best articles I've read.
Does it pay to obsess on where your kid goes to school?
https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/answer-sheet/wp/2014/04/25/does-it-pay-to-obsess-on-where-your-kid-goes-to-college/
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I personally would buy where you can get a house and not worry about which ES. I feel like its 6 of one, half a dozen of the other.
+1000 So much time wasted here worrying about which school to pick. Your kid is coming from a high-income, college-educated family. They’ll be fine in whatever elementary school they attend.
Anonymous wrote:I would pick Wakefield. You didn’t ask about other schools but I would avoid olde creek and little run.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I personally would buy where you can get a house and not worry about which ES. I feel like its 6 of one, half a dozen of the other.
+1000 So much time wasted here worrying about which school to pick. Your kid is coming from a high-income, college-educated family. They’ll be fine in whatever elementary school they attend.
How do you know? You don't know my child and what they need (and what I want for them), I do.
High SES background doesn't have direct causal influence on a child's outcomes. It's a proximal factor. Part of the reason kids from high SES families do well is because their parents worry and help select an environment they believe their child will thrive in.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I personally would buy where you can get a house and not worry about which ES. I feel like its 6 of one, half a dozen of the other.
+1000 So much time wasted here worrying about which school to pick. Your kid is coming from a high-income, college-educated family. They’ll be fine in whatever elementary school they attend.
Anonymous wrote:I personally would buy where you can get a house and not worry about which ES. I feel like its 6 of one, half a dozen of the other.
Anonymous wrote:I would pick Wakefield. You didn’t ask about other schools but I would avoid olde creek and little run.
Anonymous wrote:WFES outscored the other two on standardized reading tests this year. Kind of a big deal given that it is NOT an AAP center, so shouldn't outperform schools serving as gifted hubs.