Anonymous wrote:Not really what you’re asking about, but we are a longtime Latin family and live on the Hill. Once your kid can ride Metro, the commute won’t be bad at all. Our kids did the bus for the first two years (the private Latin bus) which would be a bit of a hassle for you. But after that, most of the kids commute via Metro to Fort Totten and then walk to school in groups.
Also not what you’re asking, but Latin has been such a great option for our kids. Probably the best thing about raising our kids in DC.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You are within walking distance (and 2 bus options) for P St Mundo Verde, which has a feeder track to DC International middle and high school
OP here. Appreciate this and all the other suggestions. Have a few friends who left MV midway through ES cause of poor school leadership but maybe it’s gotten better? That was awhile back. Like the idea of DCI but worry it’s too far for us.
Anonymous wrote:You are within walking distance (and 2 bus options) for P St Mundo Verde, which has a feeder track to DC International middle and high school
Anonymous wrote:6th grade at John Francis is going to be a lot larger next year. Few lottery spots. It should with the size increase be a somewhat larger number of high achieving kids in the grade.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If I were you, my plan would be Francis Stephen’s then an application high school. And I would be keeping a careful eye out for the following things:
1) Signs that your elementary won’t meet your need through 5th.
2) Signs of issues at Francis Stephen’s.
3) Signs that your child (for whatever reason) wouldn’t get into McKinley Tech for HS. Sure, everyone is shooting for Walls or Banneker or Ellington, but McKinley is a solid safety school right now, IMHO.
In your case, I would only lottery before 5th if one of those things changes.
Additionally - I’d probably spend some time in 4th grade looking at other middle school choices and potentially lottery for 5th and/or 6th. It’s possible Basis or DCI or something might be a good fit for your kid and you might want to give it a shot - but with a solid middle school feeder option, I wouldn’t be upending your life in elementary school with lottery stress every year and a potential long commute. Not worth it.
New poster. Examples of such signs?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If I were you, my plan would be Francis Stephen’s then an application high school. And I would be keeping a careful eye out for the following things:
1) Signs that your elementary won’t meet your need through 5th.
2) Signs of issues at Francis Stephen’s.
3) Signs that your child (for whatever reason) wouldn’t get into McKinley Tech for HS. Sure, everyone is shooting for Walls or Banneker or Ellington, but McKinley is a solid safety school right now, IMHO.
In your case, I would only lottery before 5th if one of those things changes.
Additionally - I’d probably spend some time in 4th grade looking at other middle school choices and potentially lottery for 5th and/or 6th. It’s possible Basis or DCI or something might be a good fit for your kid and you might want to give it a shot - but with a solid middle school feeder option, I wouldn’t be upending your life in elementary school with lottery stress every year and a potential long commute. Not worth it.
New poster. Examples of such signs?
Anonymous wrote:John Francis is in my view an okay/viable option. Stay. Lottery for Latins for 5th (do not have to go), not a huge fan of Basis but it goes deep into its waitlist for 5th grade, lottery for Hardy for 6th (you would need a good number there are usually some spots). There are also some other options you can open house and add to your lottery bingo card for 6th that are not clearly any better but different in some respects than John Francis that you could also compare as an alternative choice to your as of right access to John Francis. Are you sure you wont be sent to the new Euclid Middle School - that will probably also be decent but its an unknown.
Anonymous wrote:If I were you, my plan would be Francis Stephen’s then an application high school. And I would be keeping a careful eye out for the following things:
1) Signs that your elementary won’t meet your need through 5th.
2) Signs of issues at Francis Stephen’s.
3) Signs that your child (for whatever reason) wouldn’t get into McKinley Tech for HS. Sure, everyone is shooting for Walls or Banneker or Ellington, but McKinley is a solid safety school right now, IMHO.
In your case, I would only lottery before 5th if one of those things changes.
Additionally - I’d probably spend some time in 4th grade looking at other middle school choices and potentially lottery for 5th and/or 6th. It’s possible Basis or DCI or something might be a good fit for your kid and you might want to give it a shot - but with a solid middle school feeder option, I wouldn’t be upending your life in elementary school with lottery stress every year and a potential long commute. Not worth it.
Anonymous wrote:I know others have posted this question before...but here goes...Have child in early elementary school. We live in center city and are having a great experience so far at our in-boundary, a well-run, Title I DCPS which gets praise on DCUM (when it is mentioned here, which is rare). School has iffy test scores and a high-poverty population, but strong leadership and teaching staff. For my child's year, it will feed John Francis Education Campus Middle, which I toured for elementary and really liked, though I wonder how the transition with the new middle opening will work.
My question: You only get so many chances in the lottery, especially with an only child. Should we lottery as often as possible to get into a Ward 3 school or H-A so that we can get into a better feeder pattern, even knowing that it would mean a long, annoying commute for many years, for not neccesarily a better elementary and middle experience?
Are those Ward 3 elementary schools and H-A - and Hardy and Deal - so much better than the city center title I's/Francis middle that making the transfer is worth it for its own sake? The test scores would say yes, though it's hard to separate out how much of that is just demographics.
Our other option: Stay at our Title I through 5, then do Francis, and cross our fingers for an application high school while saving for private as a back-up. Obviously, we can take that plan year by year. If our school - or later on, Francis - stops working for our kid, we will lottery. But wondering how proactive we should be when all is currently well, but we know that we can't stay in this pyrimad forever - the high school is a no-go.
I'm inclined to stick where we are, but curious for your thoughts.