Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OK, OP, you've convinced me. There are some parents in DC who would rather stay in the city and enroll their kids in inferior schools, roll the dice with lotteries, or take a chance on a new charter, rather than move.
Who determines what inferior is?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Because life in the suburbs makes me want to spoon my eyes out.
again selfish parents not thinking of their kids
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OK, OP, you've convinced me. There are some parents in DC who would rather stay in the city and enroll their kids in inferior schools, roll the dice with lotteries, or take a chance on a new charter, rather than move.
Who determines what inferior is?
Anonymous wrote:OK, OP, you've convinced me. There are some parents in DC who would rather stay in the city and enroll their kids in inferior schools, roll the dice with lotteries, or take a chance on a new charter, rather than move.
Anonymous wrote:transvaginal ultrasound ... cost VA my vote and my tax dollars.
Anonymous wrote:
Because it was grassy and wanted wear;
Robert Frost (1874ā1963)
Anonymous wrote:She's 2. She goes to daycare in Dupont by my office. Our plan is to play the charter lotteries until she gets in somewhere. If she doesn't get into any of the places we like (the usual immersion things), I'm perfectly okay with her going to Tubman for kindergarten until she gets in somewhere better. If it turns out to not to be a good fit for her personally for whatever reason, we will reevaluate, but one of the reasons we picked where we picked was that the local option was acceptable for the younger years. My personal feeling is that middle school is terrible for everyone, no matter where you live (I went to two different highly ranked middle schools in the Midwest and they were both miserable experiences and I was so relieved when they were over), and that when we get to that point, we will figure things out.
Curious as to how you reached that conclusion. Not my impression at all.
Anonymous wrote:Because when I was in 6th grade and my parents said, if everyone else wants to jump off a bridge do you want to do that to? I hated it, but eventually I learned to be confident in my own opinions and choices and not look to others for validation. Also, judge not lest you be judged repeated enough times and I learned other people can make different choices than I do and that's ok too.
Bottom line, my parents raised a person who was confident in her convictions and didn't need anonymous message boards to validate my opinion.
Also, excessive punctuation makes you look weak and vapid.
She's 2. She goes to daycare in Dupont by my office. Our plan is to play the charter lotteries until she gets in somewhere. If she doesn't get into any of the places we like (the usual immersion things), I'm perfectly okay with her going to Tubman for kindergarten until she gets in somewhere better. If it turns out to not to be a good fit for her personally for whatever reason, we will reevaluate, but one of the reasons we picked where we picked was that the local option was acceptable for the younger years. My personal feeling is that middle school is terrible for everyone, no matter where you live (I went to two different highly ranked middle schools in the Midwest and they were both miserable experiences and I was so relieved when they were over), and that when we get to that point, we will figure things out.