Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It should be noted that for APS high schools, there are usually some new-to-public-school students from the local parochial schools. But those families are already Arlington residents.
And like some neighbors of ours, some families do move within Arlington (typically early elementary grades, or just before middle school) with specific APS schools in mind, for whatever reason.
I think of Langley, Meridian, McLean, Yorktown and W&L as the same bucket but nowhere near ACH or West Potomac. Niche is a horrible useless thing but it does have median home price which is waaaaay different for west Potomac and ACH vs, say, Yorktown. You are getting really different student populations with those two housing values. Not to say there aren’t a million exceptions and that educational experience does not by definition match exactly with housing values …. But it’s going to be a way better proxy for comparison.
I thought West Potomac HS was a good FCPS school that families seek out when house shopping. The homes down in Hollin Hill and also near the Bellevue CC are certainly stunning. Family friends live there and love the public elementary.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It should be noted that for APS high schools, there are usually some new-to-public-school students from the local parochial schools. But those families are already Arlington residents.
And like some neighbors of ours, some families do move within Arlington (typically early elementary grades, or just before middle school) with specific APS schools in mind, for whatever reason.
I think of Langley, Meridian, McLean, Yorktown and W&L as the same bucket but nowhere near ACH or West Potomac. Niche is a horrible useless thing but it does have median home price which is waaaaay different for west Potomac and ACH vs, say, Yorktown. You are getting really different student populations with those two housing values. Not to say there aren’t a million exceptions and that educational experience does not by definition match exactly with housing values …. But it’s going to be a way better proxy for comparison.
Anonymous wrote:It should be noted that for APS high schools, there are usually some new-to-public-school students from the local parochial schools. But those families are already Arlington residents.
And like some neighbors of ours, some families do move within Arlington (typically early elementary grades, or just before middle school) with specific APS schools in mind, for whatever reason.
Anonymous wrote:Is there anywhere in FCPS that has the city-ish feel of Arlington or Old Town? The main thing keeping us in APS is lifestyle and proximity to DC. I doubt my kids would spend nearly as much time at the Smithsonian or the Kennedy Center if we moved to Fairfax, and that comes with educational benefits too.
Anonymous wrote:I am decently happy with APS, but I wouldn't move here for the schools unless I didn't know the schools well. I agree that if someone is moving for the schools and is okay with public, they would go to FCPS. Even factoring in commutes, I'm not sure ACPS school zones are much worse than APS school zones. So overall it's unlikely that someone would move from ACPS to APS .
I have heard of a few people moving from APS to FCPS, but schools were one of a variety of factors. If people are seriously unhappy with APS they usually go private or homeschool, but I actually don't know many who have even done that. Usually people just complain a lot and/or advocate for change, but they make it work.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why? Just go to FCPS, APS is pretty similar in quality now
At least Arlington has more options than one single overcrowded unmanageable high school. Nothing quite compares to the uniqueness of ACPS in that regard.
ACPS? Arlington is APS. Alexandria is ACPS, where the OP is moving from.
Anonymous wrote:No one is leaving APS for FCPS. Please.
People go private if they aren’t going to use APS.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Most people first choose between APS or ACPS then move to Fairfax if it doesn't work out.
I don’t think many former APS parents go to FCPS. There’s no pipeline like that. The ones that don’t stick with APS for whatever reason go the independent school route, the top 3 or just below that level.
For the OP: unless you’re drawn to particular neighborhoods in Arlington, you should expand your search. APS, FCCPS, FCPS, MCPS, and maybe even DCPS (upper NW). There are lots of good options for strong public school pyramids. Or just stick it out with ACPS.
Many do, but they don't tell you. People don't choose Arlington for the schools. And they definitely don't choose Alexandria for the schools.
There is no difference in the college acceptances for the wealthy parts of Fairfax vs Arlington public schools. Put aside TJ, which is unique, you can’t point to any significant differences between W&L, YHS, Langley, McLean, and Meridian. And while college acceptance is by no means a perfect rubric for measuring the quality of the HS education one receives, it is at least a measure of where there might be significant differences in the quality of the schooling. Alexandria City HS has a more socio economically diverse student population and historically has had a poorer academic reputation. Not a bad reputation just not on par with the schools above.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Most people first choose between APS or ACPS then move to Fairfax if it doesn't work out.
I don’t think many former APS parents go to FCPS. There’s no pipeline like that. The ones that don’t stick with APS for whatever reason go the independent school route, the top 3 or just below that level.
For the OP: unless you’re drawn to particular neighborhoods in Arlington, you should expand your search. APS, FCCPS, FCPS, MCPS, and maybe even DCPS (upper NW). There are lots of good options for strong public school pyramids. Or just stick it out with ACPS.
Many do, but they don't tell you. People don't choose Arlington for the schools. And they definitely don't choose Alexandria for the schools.