Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP as you will see from this thread there are people who think the only criteria for a good school is one their child can walk to. Above all else, their children need to walk to school.
You need to lay out a lot more info about what you’re looking for if you want useful advice.
In N. Arlington that's code for "I don't want my kids going to school with the poors."
Anonymous wrote:OP as you will see from this thread there are people who think the only criteria for a good school is one their child can walk to. Above all else, their children need to walk to school.
You need to lay out a lot more info about what you’re looking for if you want useful advice.
Anonymous wrote:OP as you will see from this thread there are people who think the only criteria for a good school is one their child can walk to. Above all else, their children need to walk to school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Note also that school zones change and that your neighborhood school may in fact close. So unless you live “across the street” from the school, expect the possibility of a zone change. APS families literally a short block away from their neighborhood middle school spent the past year fighting a proposed zoning change to another school far away.
This is happening not just in APS, but also DC, Montgomery and Fairfax counties over the next few years.
No guarantee... ask the folks in Madison Manor adjacent to McKinley. APS Planning thinks big and doesn't care
Anonymous wrote:Taylor or ASFS, DHMS, WL
Anonymous wrote:Note also that school zones change and that your neighborhood school may in fact close. So unless you live “across the street” from the school, expect the possibility of a zone change. APS families literally a short block away from their neighborhood middle school spent the past year fighting a proposed zoning change to another school far away.
This is happening not just in APS, but also DC, Montgomery and Fairfax counties over the next few years.