Anonymous wrote:Won't anyone think of the poor western county residents! They have no political clout in Bethesda or North Bethesda, or North North Besthesda, or West Bethesda!
Anonymous wrote:Just left that cluster before kids hit Frost/Wootton. I was once in your place and read your thread differently (perhaps) than the others. No, you are not getting your money’s worth. The upper tier cluster has ancient buildings - some of the oldest in the system. You paid 500,000 plus for your house and your kids are falling through the cracks due to politics. Gaithersburg high is brand new - and your tax dollars fronted it. (Title 1). Whitman is getting another addition after a recent rebuild - yep with your dollars. Wealthy talks. They pay more in taxes. Wootton has been delayed for a decade due to politics frankly - the ‘dirty’ middle doesn’t have enough power. Most of the marketing is about Blair because it’s in the power center of the county - TP/Ss. The Wootton cluster works on paper but has little or no soul. It should be called the Cram School cluster - probably has one of the highest per capita cram school clusters in the region. Seriously ponder moving - the housing prices are high and there are MUCH greener pastures. No the kids mostly go to UMCP unless they have family hook.
Anonymous wrote:Op bear in mind a talented student at a high ranking high school is a small fish in a big pond. While you may hear many stories of kids who go from woottok to top colleges there are many others who *would* have gone to those top colleges except they are in a very competitive pool of similarly talented students. Had they done as well at a lower ranked school, they would have been a shoe-in.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:From my neighborhood last three years:
Michigan
UMD (lots!)
Wesleyan
Pitt
Miami
UCLA
So so many UMD! Ah well. I guess it’s just the area. When I think of how many kids in my Northern California High school went to UCs it just makes sense.
Maryland is by far the best bang for the buck for any family that doesn't qualify for much aid. Far better than holding a 6 figure student debt after four years.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you think your kids need to compete with private school kids, then I would suggest send them to private school.
-parent of MS and HSer, one who is "gifted", and in public schools.
Yes your kids will compete with private school Kids at all Times in life. For jobs, promotions, internships and more. The world is overcrowded, the marketplace is saturated and if you think your kids will be in some sort of silo you’re mistaken.
Yes, and it's amazing how so many public school students are able to compete in the marketplace with private school kids.![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:From my neighborhood last three years:
Michigan
UMD (lots!)
Wesleyan
Pitt
Miami
UCLA
So so many UMD! Ah well. I guess it’s just the area. When I think of how many kids in my Northern California High school went to UCs it just makes sense.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you think your kids need to compete with private school kids, then I would suggest send them to private school.
-parent of MS and HSer, one who is "gifted", and in public schools.
Yes your kids will compete with private school Kids at all Times in life. For jobs, promotions, internships and more. The world is overcrowded, the marketplace is saturated and if you think your kids will be in some sort of silo you’re mistaken.
Anonymous wrote:Op bear in mind a talented student at a high ranking high school is a small fish in a big pond. While you may hear many stories of kids who go from woottok to top colleges there are many others who *would* have gone to those top colleges except they are in a very competitive pool of similarly talented students. Had they done as well at a lower ranked school, they would have been a shoe-in.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:From my neighborhood last three years:
Michigan
UMD (lots!)
Wesleyan
Pitt
Miami
UCLA
So so many UMD! Ah well. I guess it’s just the area. When I think of how many kids in my Northern California High school went to UCs it just makes sense.