Anonymous
Post 10/01/2011 14:19     Subject: Haycock vs. good DC public

Anonymous wrote:I have a child in Haycock AAP. It is a great school! If I had it to do over again, I'd move into the Haycock district. I'd opt for Haycock over DC because you can stay in that district through high school. It doesn't make sense to me to move to DC if you are one of the people who believes middle/high in DC publics are not an option. (No judgment on whether DC middle/high are acceptable because I truly don't know as we haven't looked into them.) Why set yourself up to have to move in several years?


Ggod point. Go to the DC school forum and you'll see the parents zoned for Deal and Hardy in their never-ending tizzy over those schools. If you live near Haycock, you're close to Metro and in a great school pyramid throughout HS.
Anonymous
Post 10/01/2011 11:44     Subject: Haycock vs. good DC public

I have a child in Haycock AAP. It is a great school! If I had it to do over again, I'd move into the Haycock district. I'd opt for Haycock over DC because you can stay in that district through high school. It doesn't make sense to me to move to DC if you are one of the people who believes middle/high in DC publics are not an option. (No judgment on whether DC middle/high are acceptable because I truly don't know as we haven't looked into them.) Why set yourself up to have to move in several years?
Anonymous
Post 10/01/2011 09:30     Subject: Haycock vs. good DC public

In general, though, it IS a car-driven, suburban lifestyle. We walk to the metro, too, but drive pretty much every place else. That said, Haycock is a fantastic school.
Anonymous
Post 09/30/2011 13:29     Subject: Re:Haycock vs. good DC public

Haycock, as a school not just the AAP center, is great as well. Thus far we are happy that we moved to its district. Its area is very close to Downtown Falls Church City as well as McLean, close to the metro and offers a lot of activities for families.
Anonymous
Post 09/29/2011 12:28     Subject: Re:Haycock vs. good DC public

it depends where you live. We live in Haycock district and we walk to the metro every day. We also walk to several restaurants, bike trail, playground... it's more walkable than some of the DC neighborhoods where my friends live. But of course it is not the city...if you venture outside the immediate area, there are lots of strip malls, etc...
Anonymous
Post 09/29/2011 12:18     Subject: Haycock vs. good DC public

Anonymous wrote:Our DC will hit K next year so we are deciding whether to move to the Haycock district or stay in DC. Our DC option would be a school like Janney or Key. We might go with a charter like Inspired Teaching or Mundo Verde. We like the AAP at Haycock but we don't know if our children will get in. Are the parents competitive? We are also used to city life. If we move to the Haycock area, will it be a car-driven and suburban lifestyle?


For your city life in DC, what are the things really within walking distances?
Anonymous
Post 09/29/2011 12:04     Subject: Haycock vs. good DC public

Our DC will hit K next year so we are deciding whether to move to the Haycock district or stay in DC. Our DC option would be a school like Janney or Key. We might go with a charter like Inspired Teaching or Mundo Verde. We like the AAP at Haycock but we don't know if our children will get in. Are the parents competitive? We are also used to city life. If we move to the Haycock area, will it be a car-driven and suburban lifestyle?