Anonymous wrote:And it makes it so much easier to make So Cap St a fortress against the less socially desirable kids in SW, so that's a net bonus. Because yes it would be so hard to have kids move from one schook two blocks from a metro stop to another two blocks from the next metro stop.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Best option: make Van Ness for PK3-K, and Amidon for grades 1-5.
Or for each school to run PK-5 with plenty of economic diversity, make L St SE and M St SW the border, where north goes to Amidon and south goes to Van Ness.
Or, the reverse since Amidon already has strong and well attended PK programs. Although, the north to Amidon, south of M to Van Ness boundary does rather make sense, especially since there are some projects south of M but also a bunch of townhouses that, in time, will have more families and more school age kids.
In general, SW is a bit elderly and I think you'll see a continuing trend of turnover of townhouses, with them being bought by younger residents with kids, which may increase demand for spots at Amidon, whereas the number of homes about the right size for families (i.e. not a one bedroom condo) with residents having children is pretty much encompassed by the EYA townhouse in SE, so is less likely to grow. (Even with more construction coming online in SE, I don't think very much of it looks to be family size. That is, of course, true in SW, too, but I think the existing 3 bed+ inventory is larger over there.)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Best option: make Van Ness for PK3-K, and Amidon for grades 1-5.
Or for each school to run PK-5 with plenty of economic diversity, make L St SE and M St SW the border, where north goes to Amidon and south goes to Van Ness.
Or, the reverse since Amidon already has strong and well attended PK programs. Although, the north to Amidon, south of M to Van Ness boundary does rather make sense, especially since there are some projects south of M but also a bunch of townhouses that, in time, will have more families and more school age kids.
In general, SW is a bit elderly and I think you'll see a continuing trend of turnover of townhouses, with them being bought by younger residents with kids, which may increase demand for spots at Amidon, whereas the number of homes about the right size for families (i.e. not a one bedroom condo) with residents having children is pretty much encompassed by the EYA townhouse in SE, so is less likely to grow. (Even with more construction coming online in SE, I don't think very much of it looks to be family size. That is, of course, true in SW, too, but I think the existing 3 bed+ inventory is larger over there.)
Anonymous wrote:Best option: make Van Ness for PK3-K, and Amidon for grades 1-5.
Or for each school to run PK-5 with plenty of economic diversity, make L St SE and M St SW the border, where north goes to Amidon and south goes to Van Ness.
Anonymous wrote:Please stop beating this lomg-dead horse.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Unless DCUM is full of folks looking for just-over-the-border housing projects that can be added to their child's school in order to spread the wealth, this thread reads like a bunch of people really bent out of shape that the Navy Yard is getting a modernized school and want it to be less attractive.
Not really. I'm just an Amidon parent who thinks their tone with respect to the kids that live in my neighborhood and go to my school is kind of shitty and, furthermore, thinks the zealous drive to use zoning and other regulatory rules to exclude residents from public services based on socio-economic class to be distasteful and something well worth lambasting them for.
Anonymous wrote:Unless DCUM is full of folks looking for just-over-the-border housing projects that can be added to their child's school in order to spread the wealth, this thread reads like a bunch of people really bent out of shape that the Navy Yard is getting a modernized school and want it to be less attractive.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Unless DCUM is full of folks looking for just-over-the-border housing projects that can be added to their child's school in order to spread the wealth, this thread reads like a bunch of people really bent out of shape that the Navy Yard is getting a modernized school and want it to be less attractive.
Not really. I'm just an Amidon parent who thinks their tone with respect to the kids that live in my neighborhood and go to my school is kind of shitty and, furthermore, thinks the zealous drive to use zoning and other regulatory rules to exclude residents from public services based on socio-economic class to be distasteful and something well worth lambasting them for.