Anonymous wrote:Creative Minds is too far for you and it wouldn't be worth it. They don't have good scores relative to their demographics, and they're planning to move locations in the next 5 years or so. And they experienced a big drop in enrollment this year.
Suggest you look into Seaton and Thomson.
Anonymous wrote:The PPs are all right, but I’d emphasize that PK3 being all lottery means you do have to be strategic. You’re probably not getting into any of those if you don’t have a high enough lottery number to get a PK3 seat without sibling preference at Van Ness, especially SWS and definitely not Maury. And Van Ness is great, especially for early grades and then you’d already have a community if you end up not being able to lottery for a better feeder pattern for a couple years. I’d put Van Ness first. Then Appletrees are your safeties and I’d add Amidon Bowen close to you in SW to the list, also a good school specially in the early elementary years though they also tend to not have many or any OOB seats for PK. Depends on the year and it’s been steadily becoming more popular. I personally wouldn’t waste a choice on Brent due to the swing space but like a PP said that might be one of the few “better” schools that you have a chance at, and if you don’t mind it then you’d have a nice renovated, higher performing school til middle school or whenever you give up and move to upper NW or out of DC like most others.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:That's a wild list, geographically.
If you tell us the grade you're going into and how long you plan to stay in DC, and what your in-boundary school is, people can be quite helpful.
My child will start Pre-k 3. My in-boundary school is Van Ness, but I’m willing to commute for the right school. The list of schools I listed were just a few schools that were given to me to review.
I don't know why anyone would choose Appletree over Van Ness.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:That's a wild list, geographically.
If you tell us the grade you're going into and how long you plan to stay in DC, and what your in-boundary school is, people can be quite helpful.
My child will start Pre-k 3. My in-boundary school is Van Ness, but I’m willing to commute for the right school. The list of schools I listed were just a few schools that were given to me to review.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:That's a wild list, geographically.
If you tell us the grade you're going into and how long you plan to stay in DC, and what your in-boundary school is, people can be quite helpful.
My child will start Pre-k 3. My in-boundary school is Van Ness, but I’m willing to commute for the right school. The list of schools I listed were just a few schools that were given to me to review.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:That's a wild list, geographically.
If you tell us the grade you're going into and how long you plan to stay in DC, and what your in-boundary school is, people can be quite helpful.
My child will start Pre-k 3. My in-boundary school is Van Ness, but I’m willing to commute for the right school. The list of schools I listed were just a few schools that were given to me to review.
Anonymous wrote:That's a wild list, geographically.
If you tell us the grade you're going into and how long you plan to stay in DC, and what your in-boundary school is, people can be quite helpful.