Anonymous wrote:OP here--thanks, yes, we were looking at stuff in the CCES boundary so that is helpful to know--if DC gets in they get in, if not, that's still their local school, so no need to travel far either way. Thanks!
Anonymous wrote:So is CES like AAP in Fairfax county--in other words, can you go to a CES as your base school and if your child isn't selected you can still go there in the regular gen ed program? The reason I ask is that we are moving for schools but kids are in early elementary; ideally we would just pick a school that is nearby that would give us the option to participate in CES if DC is accepted, or just go to that same nearby school if she is not. Is this how it works?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Your home/base school is determined by your physical address, OP. Check the MCPS website, enter any street address, and you will know to which school you belong.
If your child is accepted to a CES (elementary magnet), or a middle or high school magnet, they will be bused to the one that serves your area. Some bus rides are very long, you need to inquire about the bus route length. If the home school houses a CES, your child will just go to that one, and will not have to change schools.
A word about middle and high school magnets: in order to desegregate certain schools, and in an attempt to revitalize their lower-income neighborhoods, MCPS placed the middle and high school magnets there. Those schools do not perform as well as others in wealthier districts of Montgomery County, so if you don't want to live there, you'll have to accept long bus rides.
Oh please - MCPS might have put magnets where they did for this reason but a lot has changed in 30+ years since that happened.
Not as much as you hope, PP. To be perfectly clear, none of the middle and high school magnets are in even decent school districts. This is not surmise, it's fact. The reason things haven't changed that much in 30 years is that Montgomery County is very segregated and that is hard to change.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Your home/base school is determined by your physical address, OP. Check the MCPS website, enter any street address, and you will know to which school you belong.
If your child is accepted to a CES (elementary magnet), or a middle or high school magnet, they will be bused to the one that serves your area. Some bus rides are very long, you need to inquire about the bus route length. If the home school houses a CES, your child will just go to that one, and will not have to change schools.
A word about middle and high school magnets: in order to desegregate certain schools, and in an attempt to revitalize their lower-income neighborhoods, MCPS placed the middle and high school magnets there. Those schools do not perform as well as others in wealthier districts of Montgomery County, so if you don't want to live there, you'll have to accept long bus rides.
Oh please - MCPS might have put magnets where they did for this reason but a lot has changed in 30+ years since that happened.
Anonymous wrote:
A word about middle and high school magnets: in order to desegregate certain schools, and in an attempt to revitalize their lower-income neighborhoods, MCPS placed the middle and high school magnets there. Those schools do not perform as well as others in wealthier districts of Montgomery County, so if you don't want to live there, you'll have to accept long bus rides.
Anonymous wrote:
Your home/base school is determined by your physical address, OP. Check the MCPS website, enter any street address, and you will know to which school you belong.
If your child is accepted to a CES (elementary magnet), or a middle or high school magnet, they will be bused to the one that serves your area. Some bus rides are very long, you need to inquire about the bus route length. If the home school houses a CES, your child will just go to that one, and will not have to change schools.
A word about middle and high school magnets: in order to desegregate certain schools, and in an attempt to revitalize their lower-income neighborhoods, MCPS placed the middle and high school magnets there. Those schools do not perform as well as others in wealthier districts of Montgomery County, so if you don't want to live there, you'll have to accept long bus rides.