Anonymous wrote:Anything that zones to Langley, McLean, George Mason, Marshall, or Yorktown will satisfy most school snobs.
Not sure why W-L gets plaudits here while Wakefield is generally shunned. The demographics aren't terribly different, there's more difference between Yorktown and
Yorktown: 7 on GS, 14% poors, 67% White, 14% Hispanic, 11% Asian, 8% Black
W-L: 5 on GS, 30% poors, 42% White, 33% Hispanic, 14% Black, 12% Asian
Wakefield: 4 on GS, 41% poors, 47% Hispanic, 25% Black, 16% White, 11% Asian
TC Williams: 4 on GS (*), 39% poors, 44% Black, 27% Hispanic, 21% White, 7% Asian
W-L, Annandale, Stuart, Falls Church, Wakefield, and TC Williams are for the more urban pioneering among us. You do run the risk of living near stereotypes of urban poverty, but if you get a nice immediate neighborhood, you -- and your kids -- can really thrive.
I think Madison and Woodson have some tiny sliver inside the Beltway. They meet with school snob approval, though.
Anonymous wrote:Anything that zones to Langley, McLean, George Mason, Marshall, or Yorktown will satisfy most school snobs.
Not sure why W-L gets plaudits here while Wakefield is generally shunned. The demographics aren't terribly different, there's more difference between Yorktown and
Yorktown: 7 on GS, 14% poors, 67% White, 14% Hispanic, 11% Asian, 8% Black
W-L: 5 on GS, 30% poors, 42% White, 33% Hispanic, 14% Black, 12% Asian
Wakefield: 4 on GS, 41% poors, 47% Hispanic, 25% Black, 16% White, 11% Asian
TC Williams: 4 on GS (*), 39% poors, 44% Black, 27% Hispanic, 21% White, 7% Asian
W-L, Annandale, Stuart, Falls Church, Wakefield, and TC Williams are for the more urban pioneering among us. You do run the risk of living near stereotypes of urban poverty, but if you get a nice immediate neighborhood, you -- and your kids -- can really thrive.
I think Madison and Woodson have some tiny sliver inside the Beltway. They meet with school snob approval, though.
Anonymous wrote:Anything that zones to Langley, McLean, George Mason, Marshall, or Yorktown will satisfy most school snobs.
Not sure why W-L gets plaudits here while Wakefield is generally shunned. The demographics aren't terribly different, there's more difference between Yorktown and
Yorktown: 7 on GS, 14% poors, 67% White, 14% Hispanic, 11% Asian, 8% Black
W-L: 5 on GS, 30% poors, 42% White, 33% Hispanic, 14% Black, 12% Asian
Wakefield: 4 on GS, 41% poors, 47% Hispanic, 25% Black, 16% White, 11% Asian
TC Williams: 4 on GS (*), 39% poors, 44% Black, 27% Hispanic, 21% White, 7% Asian
W-L, Annandale, Stuart, Falls Church, Wakefield, and TC Williams are for the more urban pioneering among us. You do run the risk of living near stereotypes of urban poverty, but if you get a nice immediate neighborhood, you -- and your kids -- can really thrive.
I think Madison and Woodson have some tiny sliver inside the Beltway. They meet with school snob approval, though.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I think Madison and Woodson have some tiny sliver inside the Beltway. They meet with school snob approval, though.
No one who lives inside the Beltway is zoned for Madison or Woodson. Some students who live inside the Beltway might be able to pupil place there for the AP program; not sure.
Anonymous wrote:
I think Madison and Woodson have some tiny sliver inside the Beltway. They meet with school snob approval, though.
Anonymous wrote:We were in the exact same situation a few years ago. We ended up in McLean Hamlet (22102). Have an awesome house, great neighborhood, fun pool club for the summer, and Spring Hill elementary is first rate. About half of the kids (grades 3 and up) are in AAP and the school has a real community feel.
