Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Get rid of the uniforms.
Key does not have uniforms.
Anonymous wrote:Get rid of the uniforms.
Anonymous wrote:Another Key parent hoping for the Hardy option in the future. I keep wondering if there's more that parents with younger Key kids can/should do to get involved earlier with moving Hardy to match the neighborhood interests before their kids reach 3rd/4th grade & start getting in the private/charter application time frame.
Anonymous wrote:OP, I was you 13 years ago. We moved in-bounds for Key with our three children, saw them all go through and it was some of the happiest years of my life. We were active in the PTA and got to know a lot of families, it's a small school and you can feel like you know all of the parents and kids. Palisades in many ways is like a small town, if you know people at Key you'll be thick with the whole neighborhood. It's great.
But for the dark side: enrollment at Key starts dropping off around the third grade, the fifth grade is about a third the size of the kindergarten. The reason is anxiety about middle school. Very few families go to Hardy, and if you're leaving DCPS for charters or private your choices are a lot better if you leave for fourth or fifth grade.
A dozen years ago, middle school was a decade away for my kids. The neighbors warned me about Hardy, but I figured DCPS had changed so much in the prior decade that there is no telling what Hardy would be like a decade hence. While Hardy hasn't changed as much as we'd hoped in the past decade, there's no telling what the next decade holds.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, I was you 13 years ago. We moved in-bounds for Key with our three children, saw them all go through and it was some of the happiest years of my life. We were active in the PTA and got to know a lot of families, it's a small school and you can feel like you know all of the parents and kids. Palisades in many ways is like a small town, if you know people at Key you'll be thick with the whole neighborhood. It's great.
But for the dark side: enrollment at Key starts dropping off around the third grade, the fifth grade is about a third the size of the kindergarten. The reason is anxiety about middle school. Very few families go to Hardy, and if you're leaving DCPS for charters or private your choices are a lot better if you leave for fourth or fifth grade.
A dozen years ago, middle school was a decade away for my kids. The neighbors warned me about Hardy, but I figured DCPS had changed so much in the prior decade that there is no telling what Hardy would be like a decade hence. While Hardy hasn't changed as much as we'd hoped in the past decade, there's no telling what the next decade holds.
OP here:
Thanks - this is great insight! Are your kids at Hardy? Or did you go private/HRCS? Or did you completely leave the area?
Anonymous wrote:OP, I was you 13 years ago. We moved in-bounds for Key with our three children, saw them all go through and it was some of the happiest years of my life. We were active in the PTA and got to know a lot of families, it's a small school and you can feel like you know all of the parents and kids. Palisades in many ways is like a small town, if you know people at Key you'll be thick with the whole neighborhood. It's great.
But for the dark side: enrollment at Key starts dropping off around the third grade, the fifth grade is about a third the size of the kindergarten. The reason is anxiety about middle school. Very few families go to Hardy, and if you're leaving DCPS for charters or private your choices are a lot better if you leave for fourth or fifth grade.
A dozen years ago, middle school was a decade away for my kids. The neighbors warned me about Hardy, but I figured DCPS had changed so much in the prior decade that there is no telling what Hardy would be like a decade hence. While Hardy hasn't changed as much as we'd hoped in the past decade, there's no telling what the next decade holds.