Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:NP here - what if you add Shrevewood and Lemon Road to the mix?
OP said they'd narrowed it down to the two school pyramids she mentioned.
Also if they were going to expand their search to neighboring school districts, Kent gardens and the Arlington elementary schools that feed to Yorktown (Nottingham, Tuckahoe, etc.) would be the natural choices, not Pimmit Hills.
Umm, you do know that Shrevewood and Lemon Road serve many neighborhoods besides Pimmit Hills, yes? Technically, Shrevewood doesn't even serve Pimmit Hills, just the apartments on Pimmit Dr. near the Whole Foods.
To the person interested in Shrevewood and Lemon Road, both schools are good. More diverse than Haycock. Shrevewood is bursting at its seams, but does a good job at fitting everyone into the school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:NP here - what if you add Shrevewood and Lemon Road to the mix?
OP said they'd narrowed it down to the two school pyramids she mentioned.
Also if they were going to expand their search to neighboring school districts, Kent gardens and the Arlington elementary schools that feed to Yorktown (Nottingham, Tuckahoe, etc.) would be the natural choices, not Pimmit Hills.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:NP here - what if you add Shrevewood and Lemon Road to the mix?
OP said they'd narrowed it down to the two school pyramids she mentioned.
Anonymous wrote:NP here - what if you add Shrevewood and Lemon Road to the mix?
Anonymous wrote:Haycock class sizes are much larger. This has been hard some years for my quiet kids. They're K classes were giant and overwhelming for them.
Anonymous wrote:Haycock class sizes are much larger. This has been hard some years for my quiet kids. They're K classes were giant and overwhelming for them.
Anonymous wrote:We went through this summer of 2015 - we looked for a house we liked knowing that whichever school we ended up in would be fine. You can't make a bad decision. DS is in K at Haycock and we live about 5 houses outside the FCC line - he's doing really well. If we'd found the house in FCC instead, that would have been great too.
In my experience taxes and house prices are both higher in FCC.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We are looking to buy a house shortly in the Falls Church area and have narrowed it down to these two school pyramids. I'd love to hear from anyone else who made this decision. What are the pros and cons of each school? Is the ability to access AAP within FCPS worthwhile, or is the smaller community you can find in FCC a better choice?
TIA!
Pros of Haycock - larger cohort of really smart kids, more STEM-focused activities, feeds into academically stronger middle/high schools (Longfellow/McLean) that offer wider range of courses
Cons of Haycock - non-AAP kids may feel second-rate, Longfellow and McLean are both relatively large schools
Pros of MD/TJ - smaller schools, more nurturing atmosphere, feed into IB high school (George Mason) if you like that
Cons of MD/TJ - may run out of space (didn't get permission to expand MD as much as FCC wanted), kids are in classes with the same group every year, George Mason sports teams only compete against other small schools that aren't in NoVa.
Anonymous wrote:We are looking to buy a house shortly in the Falls Church area and have narrowed it down to these two school pyramids. I'd love to hear from anyone else who made this decision. What are the pros and cons of each school? Is the ability to access AAP within FCPS worthwhile, or is the smaller community you can find in FCC a better choice?
TIA!