Anonymous wrote:OP here. thanks everyone for the responses. We looked at Potomac school as well. great school but didnt look diverse. every class had 1-2 non-white kids. We are looking for more diversity. wondering how SH, Potomac and Langley rank amongst diversity in elementary school. laso would be great if any SH parent can comment on parent involvement, curriculum, language/sports/arts/music programs
Anonymous wrote:OP here. thanks everyone for the responses. We looked at Potomac school as well. great school but didnt look diverse. every class had 1-2 non-white kids. We are looking for more diversity. wondering how SH, Potomac and Langley rank amongst diversity in elementary school. laso would be great if any SH parent can comment on parent involvement, curriculum, language/sports/arts/music programs
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There are several African American children and a few Hispanic children in the K class at Langley this year. And several various Asian children too. Every K class has non-white/non-Asian diversity in it.
Thanks for chiming in. We're at SH, deciding whether to apply to Langley for a rising 1st grader (who knows if there will be any spots available and who knows if my son would be accepted).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There are several African American children and a few Hispanic children in the K class at Langley this year. And several various Asian children too. Every K class has non-white/non-Asian diversity in it.
Thanks for chiming in. We're at SH, deciding whether to apply to Langley for a rising 1st grader (who knows if there will be any spots available and who knows if my son would be accepted).
Anonymous wrote:There are several African American children and a few Hispanic children in the K class at Langley this year. And several various Asian children too. Every K class has non-white/non-Asian diversity in it.
Anonymous wrote:I honestly think that Langley School's K is more diverse than Spring Hill.
Anonymous wrote:The new full-day K program at Spring Hill is first rate. I had some heartburn about the class size (25 kids) initially, but the teachers are amazing!
If you have the cash to burn, sure, your child will have a smaller class and a nicer playground. However, I don't think that your child can do better academically or socially than Spring Hill.
Also, my child is friends with a diverse group of kids, something I highly value. DH is a physician and for what its worth, he is so grateful to have gone through public school. In his job, he needs to be able to communicate and show understanding for people from all walks of life.
So, yup I'm glad that we didn't spend +$25K on private school this year!!! That same $25K will fund the 529, a trip to Europe for our whole family and some fun extras.