Anonymous wrote:Y'all must be rich as hell. (And don't tell me $250k+ HHI isn't rich, or at least UMC.)
I don't know how desperate I would have to be to *sell my house*, pack my stuff, uproot my family, etc., which would take months and cost who-knows-what, on the *chance* you'll get more in-person in Fall of 2021 (because that's as fast as I could move!) AND be assured they would get as good or better education in the long term elsewhere. And all the growing pains?
I guess if you can afford two mortgages, if you were already looking to move soon AND your child is in the bottom 1-2% of the worst struggles, etc...
But I think a lot of you are posing and would be fools to do it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can’t afford to move.
Florida is cheap. You could stay in a motel for 6 months and spend far less than here. No power bill, no cable bill, just the hotel room and food while your child learns in a classroom.
That sounds traumatic and fun.
No, the real trauma is DL. Better to live next to meth whores and registered sex offenders while you sit in one of finest public school buildings Florida’s tax payers are willing to offer than to do another second of Zoom in the DMV.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here.
We've applied our one kid to 7 privates. Hoping one comes through but applications are way up all all schools.
Kid #2 is already in private.
Kid #3 in public and struggling but we don't have the money for more private school so didn't apply. This is our youngest kids and we love our elementary... just need in-person.
I'm thinking we may just move over the summer if things are trending virtual in June (which is when we're locked in for private tuition). It seems to be the easiest option.
Sucks for your third kid. And a good caution to others, not to have more kids than you can comfortably afford.
You are a horrible judgy person. Do you know how much you suck?
NP here. After all the vitriol thrown at teachers and people concerned about spread you have the gall to say this person is judgy? Seriously; This is what you take issue with?
NP here, but I'm with PP. Telling someone basically that their third kid would be better off not existing is bottom of the barrel judginess and way worse than telling teachers they should do their jobs effectively or "people concerned about spread" that they should look at the data when it comes to school opening.
+1 million
I'm so sick of the suggestion that rational people should have planned for this pandemic.Barring homeschooling, it was basically illegal not to send your kids to school until last March, yet we should have planned for that contingency when making major life decisions?? Oooooookay.
To answer the question...I would pursue private school, but even if my DC can't get a spot, I would not move. Not feasible for my family for many reasons.
Anonymous wrote:Not moving. DCPS DL is going fine for our 3rd grader and 1st grader. 3rd grader is self sufficient. 1st grader just needs some prompts with technology. Both do a couple of hours of virtual tutoring per week with 3 of their friends. The kids love sleeping-in.
We do some targeted outdoor/masked/distanced meet-ups so they get socialization. When I say "targeted" only families that are taking Covid precautions very seriously. Several families we have avoided since early in the pandemic have already gotten Covid, but they pushed the boundaries, seemingly just because they really, really don't like this.
But don't get me wrong -- I can't wait for in-person, so long as it is safe. It just seems like school opening is being forced at the worst time of the pandemic -- highest numbers and vaccine right around the corner. And I hate to say it, but the loudest proponents of "open now" seem to be really, really struggling with their kids being home.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m in Arlington but no. We will stay. I like our schools and ink so this won’t last forever.
Yep probably only for 2 years = 1/6 of your child's entire school career.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Y'all must be rich as hell. (And don't tell me $250k+ HHI isn't rich, or at least UMC.)
I don't know how desperate I would have to be to *sell my house*, pack my stuff, uproot my family, etc., which would take months and cost who-knows-what, on the *chance* you'll get more in-person in Fall of 2021 (because that's as fast as I could move!) AND be assured they would get as good or better education in the long term elsewhere. And all the growing pains?
I guess if you can afford two mortgages, if you were already looking to move soon AND your child is in the bottom 1-2% of the worst struggles, etc...
But I think a lot of you are posing and would be fools to do it.
For some of us, it's that we've now seen the underbelly of DCPS and WTU so confidence in DCPS schools has plummeted, combined with other reasons to leave.
Anonymous wrote:Y'all must be rich as hell. (And don't tell me $250k+ HHI isn't rich, or at least UMC.)
I don't know how desperate I would have to be to *sell my house*, pack my stuff, uproot my family, etc., which would take months and cost who-knows-what, on the *chance* you'll get more in-person in Fall of 2021 (because that's as fast as I could move!) AND be assured they would get as good or better education in the long term elsewhere. And all the growing pains?
I guess if you can afford two mortgages, if you were already looking to move soon AND your child is in the bottom 1-2% of the worst struggles, etc...
But I think a lot of you are posing and would be fools to do it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here.
We've applied our one kid to 7 privates. Hoping one comes through but applications are way up all all schools.
Kid #2 is already in private.
Kid #3 in public and struggling but we don't have the money for more private school so didn't apply. This is our youngest kids and we love our elementary... just need in-person.
I'm thinking we may just move over the summer if things are trending virtual in June (which is when we're locked in for private tuition). It seems to be the easiest option.
Sucks for your third kid. And a good caution to others, not to have more kids than you can comfortably afford.
You are a horrible judgy person. Do you know how much you suck?
NP here. After all the vitriol thrown at teachers and people concerned about spread you have the gall to say this person is judgy? Seriously; This is what you take issue with?
NP here, but I'm with PP. Telling someone basically that their third kid would be better off not existing is bottom of the barrel judginess and way worse than telling teachers they should do their jobs effectively or "people concerned about spread" that they should look at the data when it comes to school opening.
+1 million
I'm so sick of the suggestion that rational people should have planned for this pandemic.Barring homeschooling, it was basically illegal not to send your kids to school until last March, yet we should have planned for that contingency when making major life decisions?? Oooooookay.
To answer the question...I would pursue private school, but even if my DC can't get a spot, I would not move. Not feasible for my family for many reasons.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here.
We've applied our one kid to 7 privates. Hoping one comes through but applications are way up all all schools.
Kid #2 is already in private.
Kid #3 in public and struggling but we don't have the money for more private school so didn't apply. This is our youngest kids and we love our elementary... just need in-person.
I'm thinking we may just move over the summer if things are trending virtual in June (which is when we're locked in for private tuition). It seems to be the easiest option.
Sucks for your third kid. And a good caution to others, not to have more kids than you can comfortably afford.
You are a horrible judgy person. Do you know how much you suck?
NP here. After all the vitriol thrown at teachers and people concerned about spread you have the gall to say this person is judgy? Seriously; This is what you take issue with?
NP here, but I'm with PP. Telling someone basically that their third kid would be better off not existing is bottom of the barrel judginess and way worse than telling teachers they should do their jobs effectively or "people concerned about spread" that they should look at the data when it comes to school opening.
Barring homeschooling, it was basically illegal not to send your kids to school until last March, yet we should have planned for that contingency when making major life decisions?? Oooooookay.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here.
We've applied our one kid to 7 privates. Hoping one comes through but applications are way up all all schools.
Kid #2 is already in private.
Kid #3 in public and struggling but we don't have the money for more private school so didn't apply. This is our youngest kids and we love our elementary... just need in-person.
I'm thinking we may just move over the summer if things are trending virtual in June (which is when we're locked in for private tuition). It seems to be the easiest option.
Sucks for your third kid. And a good caution to others, not to have more kids than you can comfortably afford.
You are a horrible judgy person. Do you know how much you suck?
NP here. After all the vitriol thrown at teachers and people concerned about spread you have the gall to say this person is judgy? Seriously; This is what you take issue with?