Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I taught at McLean and have a student in Langley. There is much more a student socio-economic mix at McLean, but still very strong cliques. Academics at both are rigorous. We also live west of the beltway and mornings are really tough with the bus route. We are probably at the lower-end of the socio-economic spectrum at Langley and would be in the middle at McLean. My kids have never felt out-of-place because of this. I guess it is about who they choose as friends.
To put this in "perspective":
To be at the lower end of the spectrum at Langley, your parents own a $850K house in McLean. At McLean, they rent a 2-BR apartment in subsidized or inexpensive housing in Falls Church.
To be in the middle end of the spectrum at Langley, your parents own a $1.2M house in McLean or Great Falls. At McLean, they own a $850K house in McLean, Falls Church or Vienna.
To be at the high end of the spectrum at Langley, your parents own a $3-5M house in McLean or Great Falls. At McLean, they own a $2-2.5M house in McLean.
That's why people say McLean is more diverse, even though most of the kids come from upper-income families.
Anonymous wrote:Avoid Langley. The principal is easily bullied by the parents to the detriment of the students.
My child asked to be moved out of Langley, despite doing well and having friends. It was about the general climate of the school itself. When I went to disenroll my child, I was told my child was supposed to have gone to each of her teachers to tell them why she was leaving, and that I was lax in not letting her do so. My response was essentially to tell them to go to hell.
Anonymous wrote:We live in Chevy Chase and are thinking of moving to McLean. Could somebody please tell me in what ways McLean and Langley differ from each other in terms of students' attitude, academic strength, etc?
My superficial research so far says that Langley is more like Churchill in Potomac (all wealthy students with a sense of entitlement), whereas McLean is more like Whitman in Bethesda (more down-to-earth, more focused on academics, less focused on showing off wealth). Please correct me if I am wrong.
Also, for those in the Langley district west of the beltway (i.e. Spring Hill Elementary), how long does it take for the students to be bussed to high school? Does it complicate your life very much that the high school is so far away?
Thanks in advance.
Anonymous wrote:I went to an Ivy leage college with two Langley grads and they talked down about people whom they thought were poor or stupic more than anyone else there. A small sampling, but this was my impression. They were smart though.
Anonymous wrote:I taught at McLean and have a student in Langley. There is much more a student socio-economic mix at McLean, but still very strong cliques. Academics at both are rigorous. We also live west of the beltway and mornings are really tough with the bus route. We are probably at the lower-end of the socio-economic spectrum at Langley and would be in the middle at McLean. My kids have never felt out-of-place because of this. I guess it is about who they choose as friends.