Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:renting in bounds for a year is expensive, but less than private school or moving out of dc. Once you are in a school, you can stay through the terminal grade. Theoretically you could rent just for a couple of months, but I'd do it for a year so it feels legitimate and not scammy. I do think that matters. Plus it will be nice to be close to the school that first year.
OP here - so it’s allowed to rent in NW for a few months, move back home, and stay at JR through the rest of high school? Is this policy written anywhere?
No, you’d have to literally rent an apartment for 4 years. But not to live there so it can be small and simple.
Anonymous wrote:I wouldn’t write off Walls. Lots of kids there are not 4.0 students, and the math there is not hard. I think a solid B+/A- student would do fine there. The most important aspect of the application is teacher recs, so if your DD has good relationships with their 8th grade math and ELA teachers, that will get them an interview at least. And there is a writing test, which should work in your DD’s favor.
Anonymous wrote:I'll also add that the McKinley ELA and social studies departments are very strong, with a range of electives beyond the standard track. There is a theater program and, as PP mentioned, yes there is a track for graphic design.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:renting in bounds for a year is expensive, but less than private school or moving out of dc. Once you are in a school, you can stay through the terminal grade. Theoretically you could rent just for a couple of months, but I'd do it for a year so it feels legitimate and not scammy. I do think that matters. Plus it will be nice to be close to the school that first year.
OP here - so it’s allowed to rent in NW for a few months, move back home, and stay at JR through the rest of high school? Is this policy written anywhere?
No, you’d have to literally rent an apartment for 4 years. But not to live there so it can be small and simple.
Isn’t that still a form of residency fraud?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:renting in bounds for a year is expensive, but less than private school or moving out of dc. Once you are in a school, you can stay through the terminal grade. Theoretically you could rent just for a couple of months, but I'd do it for a year so it feels legitimate and not scammy. I do think that matters. Plus it will be nice to be close to the school that first year.
OP here - so it’s allowed to rent in NW for a few months, move back home, and stay at JR through the rest of high school? Is this policy written anywhere?
No, you’d have to literally rent an apartment for 4 years. But not to live there so it can be small and simple.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:renting in bounds for a year is expensive, but less than private school or moving out of dc. Once you are in a school, you can stay through the terminal grade. Theoretically you could rent just for a couple of months, but I'd do it for a year so it feels legitimate and not scammy. I do think that matters. Plus it will be nice to be close to the school that first year.
OP here - so it’s allowed to rent in NW for a few months, move back home, and stay at JR through the rest of high school? Is this policy written anywhere?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My daughter loves school and does very well in English and most other classes, but is an average math student and I’m not sure will make the cut off for walls. Banneker seems like a good school, but it’s very academically minded and seems to put less emphasis on things like art which my kid loves. Duke seems to be way too focused on art (it’s a hobby for my kid), and McKinley is too stem focused. We’re looking at sojourner truth. Our in boundary won’t work.
Where do kids go in these situations? Private? Move?
Move.
Anonymous wrote:renting in bounds for a year is expensive, but less than private school or moving out of dc. Once you are in a school, you can stay through the terminal grade. Theoretically you could rent just for a couple of months, but I'd do it for a year so it feels legitimate and not scammy. I do think that matters. Plus it will be nice to be close to the school that first year.
Anonymous wrote:My daughter loves school and does very well in English and most other classes, but is an average math student and I’m not sure will make the cut off for walls. Banneker seems like a good school, but it’s very academically minded and seems to put less emphasis on things like art which my kid loves. Duke seems to be way too focused on art (it’s a hobby for my kid), and McKinley is too stem focused. We’re looking at sojourner truth. Our in boundary won’t work.
Where do kids go in these situations? Private? Move?