Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, to answer your question, hundreds of middle schoolers take the metro or bus to school. This includes OOB kids but also all the kids who get to Basis, Latin, DCI, Cap City, etc.
Thanks, PP. This is OP again. It seems daunting to put them on a (unreliable) bus for 45+ minutes when the drive would be half of that, but it seems like it's normal? My thinking is still in elementary student mode, but I know a lot changes quickly as middle school approaches.
We do it! He likes the metro. Gets homework done or chats with pals.
Anonymous wrote:Why would you do that terrible commute? Just move to close in burbs and you have great schools with great facilities with tracking in all subjects in middle and high school. Plus school buses and neighborhood schools where the overwhelmingly majority of kids attend.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We turned down an OOB offer at Hyde-Addison this year because we're happy enough at our EOTP elementary that we didn't want to take on that commute yet. But looking ahead, we're considering either moving IB for a JR feeder or trying to lottery into an elementary feeder. I'd love to stay in our current house (we'd likely rent and rent, then move back when DC goes to college) if we can lottery in, but not sure how the logistics of a cross-town commute work in practice with older kids. Do parents drive middle schoolers every day? Carpools? Buses are so unreliable and would take 40-60 minutes, which feels like a long time when driving would be half of that. If you do the commute or are WOTP and have OOB friends that do, how do you do it?
You did what???
Where is your kid now?
Anonymous wrote:We turned down an OOB offer at Hyde-Addison this year because we're happy enough at our EOTP elementary that we didn't want to take on that commute yet. But looking ahead, we're considering either moving IB for a JR feeder or trying to lottery into an elementary feeder. I'd love to stay in our current house (we'd likely rent and rent, then move back when DC goes to college) if we can lottery in, but not sure how the logistics of a cross-town commute work in practice with older kids. Do parents drive middle schoolers every day? Carpools? Buses are so unreliable and would take 40-60 minutes, which feels like a long time when driving would be half of that. If you do the commute or are WOTP and have OOB friends that do, how do you do it?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why would you do that terrible commute? Just move to close in burbs and you have great schools with great facilities with tracking in all subjects in middle and high school. Plus school buses and neighborhood schools where the overwhelmingly majority of kids attend.
Because our mortgage is under $2k a month and we don’t want to live in the suburbs, particularly not after our child graduates high school. PLUS where we could afford in MCPS isn’t any better than JR.
Then you can easily rent out your house and rent in the burbs and then move back to the city once your kid is done with middle and high school.
Just admit that you don’t want to do it, not that you can’t.
LOL the OP clearly said they don't want to do it.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why would you do that terrible commute? Just move to close in burbs and you have great schools with great facilities with tracking in all subjects in middle and high school. Plus school buses and neighborhood schools where the overwhelmingly majority of kids attend.
Because our mortgage is under $2k a month and we don’t want to live in the suburbs, particularly not after our child graduates high school. PLUS where we could afford in MCPS isn’t any better than JR.
Then you can easily rent out your house and rent in the burbs and then move back to the city once your kid is done with middle and high school.
Just admit that you don’t want to do it, not that you can’t.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why would you do that terrible commute? Just move to close in burbs and you have great schools with great facilities with tracking in all subjects in middle and high school. Plus school buses and neighborhood schools where the overwhelmingly majority of kids attend.
Because our mortgage is under $2k a month and we don’t want to live in the suburbs, particularly not after our child graduates high school. PLUS where we could afford in MCPS isn’t any better than JR.
Then you can easily rent out your house and rent in the burbs and then move back to the city once your kid is done with middle and high school.
Just admit that you don’t want to do it, not that you can’t.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why would you do that terrible commute? Just move to close in burbs and you have great schools with great facilities with tracking in all subjects in middle and high school. Plus school buses and neighborhood schools where the overwhelmingly majority of kids attend.
Because our mortgage is under $2k a month and we don’t want to live in the suburbs, particularly not after our child graduates high school. PLUS where we could afford in MCPS isn’t any better than JR.