Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think the decision is really different if you have a good in boundary school option and are fine with sending your kid to private school until K. I would not be worried then. For me, I'm looking for a long-term option that will take my kid through at least 5th grade. Our in-boundary school is terrible, and I'd move in-boundary for a better school or to the 'burbs before I would send her there. That's the intial reason that I started going to open houses. It's not just about next year--it's also about future years, where I will need to decide whether to apply into the lottery. Even if my chances suck this year, I may very well luck out in a future year.
What I've discovered is that I'm really glad to go to open houses because I realize how very different program are. Take Appletree, for example. I thought I would love it based on what I read here, and I HATED it when I went to the open house yesterday. Just not a good fit for what I am looking for for my daughter. On the other hand, I've gone to some not-very-desirable DCPS and have really liked their early-childhood programs--way more than Appletree. And those are schools where we actually have a shot OOB. I've really gotten a chance to think about what would work for my kid and my family, and for that I am grateful. It will affect the choices that I make in education in the long-run, not just this year.
Best of luck to you.
PP, can you elaborate on what turned you off about Appletree for those of us who are considering it and haven't made it over there yet?
Anonymous wrote:I think the decision is really different if you have a good in boundary school option and are fine with sending your kid to private school until K. I would not be worried then. For me, I'm looking for a long-term option that will take my kid through at least 5th grade. Our in-boundary school is terrible, and I'd move in-boundary for a better school or to the 'burbs before I would send her there. That's the intial reason that I started going to open houses. It's not just about next year--it's also about future years, where I will need to decide whether to apply into the lottery. Even if my chances suck this year, I may very well luck out in a future year.
What I've discovered is that I'm really glad to go to open houses because I realize how very different program are. Take Appletree, for example. I thought I would love it based on what I read here, and I HATED it when I went to the open house yesterday. Just not a good fit for what I am looking for for my daughter. On the other hand, I've gone to some not-very-desirable DCPS and have really liked their early-childhood programs--way more than Appletree. And those are schools where we actually have a shot OOB. I've really gotten a chance to think about what would work for my kid and my family, and for that I am grateful. It will affect the choices that I make in education in the long-run, not just this year.
Best of luck to you.
Anonymous wrote:OP here -- great answers. I think that part of it is that I don't have a strong educational philosophy myself and believe in collective wisdom more than my own first impressions.
Anonymous wrote:OP here -- great answers. I think that part of it is that I don't have a strong educational philosophy myself and believe in collective wisdom more than my own first impressions. So, which do people like better, Ludlow Taylor or Appletree? Those are my only 2 remaining choices as I need something in stroller-distance from my house.
Anonymous wrote:I think the decision is really different if you have a good in boundary school option and are fine with sending your kid to private school until K. I would not be worried then. For me, I'm looking for a long-term option that will take my kid through at least 5th grade. Our in-boundary school is terrible, and I'd move in-boundary for a better school or to the 'burbs before I would send her there. That's the intial reason that I started going to open houses. It's not just about next year--it's also about future years, where I will need to decide whether to apply into the lottery. Even if my chances suck this year, I may very well luck out in a future year.
What I've discovered is that I'm really glad to go to open houses because I realize how very different program are. Take Appletree, for example. I thought I would love it based on what I read here, and I HATED it when I went to the open house yesterday. Just not a good fit for what I am looking for for my daughter. On the other hand, I've gone to some not-very-desirable DCPS and have really liked their early-childhood programs--way more than Appletree. And those are schools where we actually have a shot OOB. I've really gotten a chance to think about what would work for my kid and my family, and for that I am grateful. It will affect the choices that I make in education in the long-run, not just this year.
Best of luck to you.
Anonymous wrote:This is an honest question. My kid is in the PS-3 lottery. We live on the Hill and are zoned for Maury. I've been told that there is about a 50% chance that we will get a slot for Maury, where we would happily go. But there's virtually no chance of us getting into Brent, Peabody or SWS. We will probably apply to a few nearby, still-sought-after schools, like Logan, Appletree and maybe Ludlow-Taylor....there seems to be a decent chance of getting into one of those. But I don't understand...why is everybody acting like we have so many options, and weighing this school/educational philosophy against that, and hustling over to open houses during precious free time? Everybody wants the same schools. This decision isn't ours at this point. Will somebody please explain?