Anonymous wrote:
Same here (another Loudoun resident), what is this posting referring to? (Sounds like a rumor.)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't know about the perfect place to live, but why is everyone complacent about class size? Can't we get this on the FCPS budget for next year to at least reduce it to the levels we were at before the recession? Everything else has been restored that I can see. Even if a teacher can teach to all those students (and I don't believe they can), the classrooms are overcrowded and stuffy. They weren't built to house this many students in each of them. Please ask the school board to reconsider this if you think class size is important.
less people can afford private these days. It is what it is. No one really loves the class sizes, but we have to pick our battles. I'm sure this is one of the next things teachers and administrators would like to tackle, but public schools cannot turn kids away, either. Would you prefer to stand in line like our friends in Loudoun just hoping to get into your neighborhood school, knowing if you don't get that spot your kid could be bussed halfway across the county for a school that isn't busting at the seams?
Loudoun resident here with 2 kids in school. I've never heard of what you are talking about.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't know about the perfect place to live, but why is everyone complacent about class size? Can't we get this on the FCPS budget for next year to at least reduce it to the levels we were at before the recession? Everything else has been restored that I can see. Even if a teacher can teach to all those students (and I don't believe they can), the classrooms are overcrowded and stuffy. They weren't built to house this many students in each of them. Please ask the school board to reconsider this if you think class size is important.
less people can afford private these days. It is what it is. No one really loves the class sizes, but we have to pick our battles. I'm sure this is one of the next things teachers and administrators would like to tackle, but public schools cannot turn kids away, either. Would you prefer to stand in line like our friends in Loudoun just hoping to get into your neighborhood school, knowing if you don't get that spot your kid could be bussed halfway across the county for a school that isn't busting at the seams?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Honestly? I'd buy a historic home in Old Town Alexandria or Leesburg and not give a crap about the school district. Since it's hypothetical, I also have lots o'mollah, so I can just find the kiddie a damn private school if I decide the public schools aren't good enough for my little snowflake.
Op was asking about NoVa, not the LaLaLand.
Anonymous wrote:I love driving and walking through Lyon Park. I think it's a beautiful neighborhood. But not sure what the neighborhood culture's like. If I could live anywhere, I'd still live somewhere with neighbors who I could join for a beer outside while our kids play, rather than the most attractive neighborhood or with the highest ranked schools. I always loved Old Towne too, I think the proximity to the water is really special.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We live in Great Falls and love it here. Terrible commute to DC but we work in Reston and only have to go to DC once or twice a month. It is quiet, bucolic and we see more deer and foxes than neighbors. There are no sidewalks and nothing is within walking distance and that's just fine. The schools are great and the community is tight knit because we have to work at staying in touch and connected, via play dates, activities etc. If you value privacy then you will love it here. And no, we don't hang out on DCUM where we get insulted occasionally....
Finally something nice about Great Falls!!
DH would be commuting to Arlington, is it still horrible? if we stay on the southern end thats' closest to McLean?
It would depend on which part of Arlington. DH could go the back way through McLean and miss the toll road traffic. It would be more scenic but if you are moving from out of the area, rest assured that commuting here is unlike almost anywhere else in the country, bar LA or NY.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We live in Great Falls and love it here. Terrible commute to DC but we work in Reston and only have to go to DC once or twice a month. It is quiet, bucolic and we see more deer and foxes than neighbors. There are no sidewalks and nothing is within walking distance and that's just fine. The schools are great and the community is tight knit because we have to work at staying in touch and connected, via play dates, activities etc. If you value privacy then you will love it here. And no, we don't hang out on DCUM where we get insulted occasionally....
Finally something nice about Great Falls!!
DH would be commuting to Arlington, is it still horrible? if we stay on the southern end thats' closest to McLean?
Anonymous wrote:We live in Great Falls and love it here. Terrible commute to DC but we work in Reston and only have to go to DC once or twice a month. It is quiet, bucolic and we see more deer and foxes than neighbors. There are no sidewalks and nothing is within walking distance and that's just fine. The schools are great and the community is tight knit because we have to work at staying in touch and connected, via play dates, activities etc. If you value privacy then you will love it here. And no, we don't hang out on DCUM where we get insulted occasionally....
Anonymous wrote:
I never thought of GF as being exclusively rich. We have friends who live in GF and they moved there because they could not afford Mclean, from their own blatantly honest words. This is not the first time I heard this either, i know another recently married couple who would live in Mclean if they could afford a certain type of house they want, but are considering GF instead because they can get more for their money.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So not true in my home. My boys always seek out the one or two kids of different ethnic race or nationality. However, they have always been in schools and environments with diversity. We are in N.Arlinglin and my kids do hang out with less fortunate kids and gain perspective. There are all types of living situations---ritzy to bare-bones apartments. I grew up in a very wealthy area of Ffx co. and wanted a more diverse atmosphere while still having great schools. I also didn't want my kids around some of the attitudes and excess that were so very common in my HS.
Sounds like your kids would have had a similar experience in Fairfax. Just about any part of Fairfax County, with its more sizable Asian population, will be more diverse than the North Arlington neighborhoods that feed into Jamestown, Nottingham, Taylor or Tuckahoe. These areas of North Arlington are really the Upper Caucasia of 2012.