Anonymous wrote:How is everyone finding their year at OTES so far?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I had never heard of that school and am surprised there are highly regarded so close to Wheaton. A good alternative for low income families
Your post is really offensive and not a low income school.
Well it isn’t an affluent school. It is a Wheaton school that has more SFHs than the avg for that part of the county even if if they run on the cheaper side. But the problem remains with decent elementary schools in marginal areas (as always) is the next level and the level after that when they combine with the not so decent schools that the local parents were happy to avoid initially.
Anonymous wrote:I've heard negative things about Oakland Terrace from several parents who have had kids there. I'm not surprised that there are multiple posters who are posting about problems.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I had never heard of that school and am surprised there are highly regarded so close to Wheaton. A good alternative for low income families
Your post is really offensive and not a low income school.
Well it isn’t an affluent school. It is a Wheaton school that has more SFHs than the avg for that part of the county even if if they run on the cheaper side. But the problem remains with decent elementary schools in marginal areas (as always) is the next level and the level after that when they combine with the not so decent schools that the local parents were happy to avoid initially.
DP, but you're wrong on most counts. OTES is in Silver Spring, and pretty much all of its students live in SS or Kensington. Plenty of OTES parents happily send their kids to DCC middle and high schools.
It's not affluent in the way that W-elementary feeders are, for sure. For some of us, that's part of the appeal.
Because this area doesn't have a town-based local government like New England does, you can argue until the cows come home about whether any particular area is Wheaton or Kensington or Silver Spring. You can go by the zip code, but they don't mean anything in terms of local government, and if you write Silver Spring, 20902 or Wheaton, 20902, your letter will arrive at the same house. Kensington actually has a Town of Kensington with municipal boundaries, but no one in the actual town is currently assigned to OTES. Plenty of people in the delivery zone for 20895 are. These local designations mean almost nothing around here. That is why southern Rockville can be re-branded as North Bethesda, etc. Although the City of Rockville also has municipal boundaries, I don't know many people who actually know where they are. So arguing about what is Wheaton and what is Kensington and what is Silver Spring is kind of silly.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I had never heard of that school and am surprised there are highly regarded so close to Wheaton. A good alternative for low income families
Your post is really offensive and not a low income school.
Well it isn’t an affluent school. It is a Wheaton school that has more SFHs than the avg for that part of the county even if if they run on the cheaper side. But the problem remains with decent elementary schools in marginal areas (as always) is the next level and the level after that when they combine with the not so decent schools that the local parents were happy to avoid initially.
DP, but you're wrong on most counts. OTES is in Silver Spring, and pretty much all of its students live in SS or Kensington. Plenty of OTES parents happily send their kids to DCC middle and high schools.
It's not affluent in the way that W-elementary feeders are, for sure. For some of us, that's part of the appeal.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I had never heard of that school and am surprised there are highly regarded so close to Wheaton. A good alternative for low income families
Your post is really offensive and not a low income school.
Well it isn’t an affluent school. It is a Wheaton school that has more SFHs than the avg for that part of the county even if if they run on the cheaper side. But the problem remains with decent elementary schools in marginal areas (as always) is the next level and the level after that when they combine with the not so decent schools that the local parents were happy to avoid initially.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I had never heard of that school and am surprised there are highly regarded so close to Wheaton. A good alternative for low income families
Your post is really offensive and not a low income school.
Well it isn’t an affluent school. It is a Wheaton school that has more SFHs than the avg for that part of the county even if if they run on the cheaper side. But the problem remains with decent elementary schools in marginal areas (as always) is the next level and the level after that when they combine with the not so decent schools that the local parents were happy to avoid initially.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I had never heard of that school and am surprised there are highly regarded so close to Wheaton. A good alternative for low income families
Your post is really offensive and not a low income school.
Anonymous wrote:How is everyone finding their year at OTES so far?
Anonymous wrote:To the poster here who keeps writing *books'*on this forum: just stop. Every single time OTES is mentioned in any thread you write the same kinds of things. You ask and answer your own questions as if you were multiple posters. You sound like a pain the *ss and no wonder no teacher wants you in their classroom. I certainly wouldn't. I can do my job just fine without you, thank you very much.
How many people on this board want volunteers at their desk/office/medical practice/wherever?? Especially ones who will not shut up?