Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The families at Jackson Reed are likely representative of those all over the city as it is the largest public high school in the city.
Eh but a heck of a lot of folks can't afford to move in bounds for it.... myself included
I assume you mean purchase in-boundary R/E.
Honestly, there are tons of reasonable apartments along CT Avenue that feed into JR. Not exactly a cool area for renters like Navy Yard or any number of downtown areas, so rents are cheaper.
There are a fair number of renters with kids at JR, as well as rank-and-file embassy employees (i.e., these aren't ambassadors or high-level foreign emissaries) who send their kids to DCPS.
Anonymous wrote:My child goes to JR. We live in a one bedroom apartment down the street with a pre-layoff HHI of 95k (abject poverty by DCUM standards).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The school has 2300 students. I assure you it is not majority wealthy.
1) JR currently has about 1950 students. It is way down from its peak enrollment.
2) Shepherd Elementary is zoned for Deal and JR and has a lot of OOB students.
As planned because of the opening of MacArthur; I believe official capacity is 1800, so it’s still technically overcrowded—but much better than it was!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The school has 2300 students. I assure you it is not majority wealthy.
1) JR currently has about 1950 students. It is way down from its peak enrollment.
2) Shepherd Elementary is zoned for Deal and JR and has a lot of OOB students.
Anonymous wrote:The school has 2300 students. I assure you it is not majority wealthy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The families at Jackson Reed are likely representative of those all over the city as it is the largest public high school in the city.
Eh but a heck of a lot of folks can't afford to move in bounds for it.... myself included
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The families at Jackson Reed are likely representative of those all over the city as it is the largest public high school in the city.
Eh but a heck of a lot of folks can't afford to move in bounds for it.... myself included
I assume you mean purchase in-boundary R/E.
Honestly, there are tons of reasonable apartments along CT Avenue that feed into JR. Not exactly a cool area for renters like Navy Yard or any number of downtown areas, so rents are cheaper.
There are a fair number of renters with kids at JR, as well as rank-and-file embassy employees (i.e., these aren't ambassadors or high-level foreign emissaries) who send their kids to DCPS.
When did the embassies stop paying for private?! It’s a major reason to be a white collar staffer.
Anonymous wrote:Someone can correct me with the data but my perception is the Hardy feeders are slightly more likely to have OOB spaces for, possibly because their catchments include the highest priced real estate (acknowledging WOTP is universally high priced, comparatively) and those families are more likely to choose private schools. This means the current JR classes, which have Hardy kids in large proportions, will have a lot of kids that came in that way. Now that Hardy feeds to MacArthur, I wonder if JR will be more IB and higher SES over time?
I am sure this has been hashed to death here, but if OP wanted some things to consider, enjoy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The families at Jackson Reed are likely representative of those all over the city as it is the largest public high school in the city.
Eh but a heck of a lot of folks can't afford to move in bounds for it.... myself included
I assume you mean purchase in-boundary R/E.
Honestly, there are tons of reasonable apartments along CT Avenue that feed into JR. Not exactly a cool area for renters like Navy Yard or any number of downtown areas, so rents are cheaper.
There are a fair number of renters with kids at JR, as well as rank-and-file embassy employees (i.e., these aren't ambassadors or high-level foreign emissaries) who send their kids to DCPS.
When did the embassies stop paying for private?! It’s a major reason to be a white collar staffer.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The families at Jackson Reed are likely representative of those all over the city as it is the largest public high school in the city.
Eh but a heck of a lot of folks can't afford to move in bounds for it.... myself included
I assume you mean purchase in-boundary R/E.
Honestly, there are tons of reasonable apartments along CT Avenue that feed into JR. Not exactly a cool area for renters like Navy Yard or any number of downtown areas, so rents are cheaper.
There are a fair number of renters with kids at JR, as well as rank-and-file embassy employees (i.e., these aren't ambassadors or high-level foreign emissaries) who send their kids to DCPS.
When did the embassies stop paying for private?! It’s a major reason to be a white collar staffer.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The families at Jackson Reed are likely representative of those all over the city as it is the largest public high school in the city.
Eh but a heck of a lot of folks can't afford to move in bounds for it.... myself included
I assume you mean purchase in-boundary R/E.
Honestly, there are tons of reasonable apartments along CT Avenue that feed into JR. Not exactly a cool area for renters like Navy Yard or any number of downtown areas, so rents are cheaper.
There are a fair number of renters with kids at JR, as well as rank-and-file embassy employees (i.e., these aren't ambassadors or high-level foreign emissaries) who send their kids to DCPS.