Anonymous wrote:OP sounds like the kind of parent who's aiming for the highly selective schools, in which case the answer is whenever your twins can be admitted. Some grades (usually the earlier ones) are easier than others. Many of us had to try more than once.
If I'm wrong and any private school will do, then feel free to wait until public no longer meets your needs.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So to understand correctly, you think that at some point all DCPS, and the public charters (BASIS, Latin), and the special admissions schools (Walls), will not be good enough/your kids will be too bright for them? But they’re still in pre-k? Or you want a backup?
I’m not trying to be snarky. I just don’t understand.
OP here. I don't really know. Very overwhelmed by the whole education ecosystem. How do those charters and special admission schools compare to private schools? Admission at those is by chance, right? At the risk of revealing too much, my kids are twins and the DCPS lottery does not give any advantage to multiples when it comes to keeping them together. I would consider splitting them up for high school but they need each other right now and we've already had to decline an offer to a preferred public school because one got in and the other did not.
I don't think my kids are/will be better than anyone else, it's just that both parents are reasonably smart and we had the privilege of going to private school where we grew up and want to make that available to them if it makes sense for our family and they're cut out for it academically and socially. I am worried that they'll get to a certain grade and certain paths will be closed to them because we stayed in DCPS too long.
You know about sibling preference right? You do get an advantage in the lottery with twins. Your twin with the better number will pull your other twin up as a sibling.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So to understand correctly, you think that at some point all DCPS, and the public charters (BASIS, Latin), and the special admissions schools (Walls), will not be good enough/your kids will be too bright for them? But they’re still in pre-k? Or you want a backup?
I’m not trying to be snarky. I just don’t understand.
OP here. I don't really know. Very overwhelmed by the whole education ecosystem. How do those charters and special admission schools compare to private schools? Admission at those is by chance, right? At the risk of revealing too much, my kids are twins and the DCPS lottery does not give any advantage to multiples when it comes to keeping them together. I would consider splitting them up for high school but they need each other right now and we've already had to decline an offer to a preferred public school because one got in and the other did not.
I don't think my kids are/will be better than anyone else, it's just that both parents are reasonably smart and we had the privilege of going to private school where we grew up and want to make that available to them if it makes sense for our family and they're cut out for it academically and socially. I am worried that they'll get to a certain grade and certain paths will be closed to them because we stayed in DCPS too long.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So to understand correctly, you think that at some point all DCPS, and the public charters (BASIS, Latin), and the special admissions schools (Walls), will not be good enough/your kids will be too bright for them? But they’re still in pre-k? Or you want a backup?
I’m not trying to be snarky. I just don’t understand.
OP here. I don't really know. Very overwhelmed by the whole education ecosystem. How do those charters and special admission schools compare to private schools? Admission at those is by chance, right? At the risk of revealing too much, my kids are twins and the DCPS lottery does not give any advantage to multiples when it comes to keeping them together. I would consider splitting them up for high school but they need each other right now and we've already had to decline an offer to a preferred public school because one got in and the other did not.
I don't think my kids are/will be better than anyone else, it's just that both parents are reasonably smart and we had the privilege of going to private school where we grew up and want to make that available to them if it makes sense for our family and they're cut out for it academically and socially. I am worried that they'll get to a certain grade and certain paths will be closed to them because we stayed in DCPS too long.
Anonymous wrote:So to understand correctly, you think that at some point all DCPS, and the public charters (BASIS, Latin), and the special admissions schools (Walls), will not be good enough/your kids will be too bright for them? But they’re still in pre-k? Or you want a backup?
I’m not trying to be snarky. I just don’t understand.