Anonymous wrote:All the MCPS parents are sitting on the playground complaining about their schools just like we are. It's sometimes different but it's not consistently better. Therefore I'd shop houses in both areas and choose based on logistics.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:All the MCPS parents are sitting on the playground complaining about their schools just like we are. It's sometimes different but it's not consistently better. Therefore I'd shop houses in both areas and choose based on logistics.
The complaining is different though. The MCPS parents complainers are very condescending and entitled. The DCPS parents tend to have more of “how can we improve this” mentality and see the problems in DCPS as everyone's problems to resolve as opposed to just blaming MCPS.
Anonymous wrote:4th grade mom here who has done both- we were in upper NW DC through first grade and it was totally fine. Now we're in Bethesda and I'm 8 min from the Red Line for commuting into the city. My commute is easy and I'm much more impressed with our elementary school here for our now 4th grader and his younger K sibling.
Anonymous wrote:There are plenty of peers for your kids - academically and socially - in DCPS. We stayed in DCPS (upper NW) because we loved our neighborhood, and figured the schools would be good enough. Kids went through Stoddert-Hardy-Jackson Reed - were more than ready for college and thrived while in DCPS and after graduation.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We are an MCPS family moving to DCPS for our oldest, a rising K! I think DCPS and charter elementaries are better than MCPS. I've toured many in trying to make this decision. We will re-evaluate in 5th grade!
I am confused—how are you an MCPS family if your oldest is rising K? MCPS doesn’t have Pk right?
Right. We are zoned for MCPS but are moving now to DCPS in time for our oldest to begin K there in the fall.
Anonymous wrote:All the MCPS parents are sitting on the playground complaining about their schools just like we are. It's sometimes different but it's not consistently better. Therefore I'd shop houses in both areas and choose based on logistics.
Anonymous wrote:The smaller NW DCPS elementaries feel like privates: small grade sizes, two teachers per class in K, beautiful facilities, and more varied after-school enrichment offerings than MCPS ES.
There is more latitude in DC for PTAs to fund extra staff than in MCPS, where there is no allowance for it. PTAs also seem more active in DC, by percentage of parents participating in them and funds raised per capita.
Some NW DCPS also teach a foreign language once a week during the core school day. (DC has many immersion schools, too, if you want to go that route).
Also, many MCPS don’t allow parent tours; it’s up to the principal. I was only able to tour two Bethesda publics, one Silver Spring, and one Chevy Chase public school. The MCPS schools I toured wouldn’t let us observe a class (with the exception of Somerset, whose parent guide let us pop into two classes for a few minutes) and wouldn’t allow us to come by during recess, when student—staff ratio is lowest / chaos level is highest.
DCPS, on the other hand, provides so much transparency. I visited nearly every NW school, some multiple times, and it made me feel more comfortable with DCPS as a whole. I was able to take pre-scheduled and one-off tours. Everyone was so friendly in administration! The front office staff just seem happier in DC.
I also like that DC schools are largely walkable. In MCPS, many students bus to school. I know many kids enjoy the bus, but we want to sort of “root” ourselves in a walkable school community.
Finally, I liked how diverse the parents on the tour were, by nationality and race in DC. In the Bethesda and Chevy Chase elementaries, it was almost universally white, American parents (many born in Maryland) on the tours — maybe 80-90% of the parents fit that description. We were looking for more international family community.
Anonymous wrote:The smaller NW DCPS elementaries feel like privates: small grade sizes, two teachers per class in K, beautiful facilities, and more varied after-school enrichment offerings than MCPS ES.
There is more latitude in DC for PTAs to fund extra staff than in MCPS, where there is no allowance for it. PTAs also seem more active in DC, by percentage of parents participating in them and funds raised per capita.
Some NW DCPS also teach a foreign language once a week during the core school day. (DC has many immersion schools, too, if you want to go that route).
Also, many MCPS don’t allow parent tours; it’s up to the principal. I was only able to tour two Bethesda publics, one Silver Spring, and one Chevy Chase public school. The MCPS schools I toured wouldn’t let us observe a class (with the exception of Somerset, whose parent guide let us pop into two classes for a few minutes) and wouldn’t allow us to come by during recess, when student—staff ratio is lowest / chaos level is highest.
DCPS, on the other hand, provides so much transparency. I visited nearly every NW school, some multiple times, and it made me feel more comfortable with DCPS as a whole. I was able to take pre-scheduled and one-off tours. Everyone was so friendly in administration! The front office staff just seem happier in DC.
I also like that DC schools are largely walkable. In MCPS, many students bus to school. I know many kids enjoy the bus, but we want to sort of “root” ourselves in a walkable school community.
Finally, I liked how diverse the parents on the tour were, by nationality and race in DC. In the Bethesda and Chevy Chase elementaries, it was almost universally white, American parents (many born in Maryland) on the tours — maybe 80-90% of the parents fit that description. We were looking for more international family community.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We are an MCPS family moving to DCPS for our oldest, a rising K! I think DCPS and charter elementaries are better than MCPS. I've toured many in trying to make this decision. We will re-evaluate in 5th grade!
I am confused—how are you an MCPS family if your oldest is rising K? MCPS doesn’t have Pk right?
Right. We are zoned for MCPS but are moving now to DCPS in time for our oldest to begin K there in the fall.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We are an MCPS family moving to DCPS for our oldest, a rising K! I think DCPS and charter elementaries are better than MCPS. I've toured many in trying to make this decision. We will re-evaluate in 5th grade!
I am confused—how are you an MCPS family if your oldest is rising K? MCPS doesn’t have Pk right?
Anonymous wrote:We are an MCPS family moving to DCPS for our oldest, a rising K! I think DCPS and charter elementaries are better than MCPS. I've toured many in trying to make this decision. We will re-evaluate in 5th grade!
Anonymous wrote:If you want to make the switch to MCPS at some point, I would just do that. Obviously experiences may vary, but with a MS student now (and HS student), I can’t see moving at this stage of the game. I would just do it in early ES and be done.
Lots of benefits to living in upper NW - kids walk to school, very independent, hangs out with friends and gets places without much parental involvement.
I think JRHS has pros and cons, but is not terribly academically rigorous. In retrospect, maybe we should’ve made the move to MoCo but we never wanted to do it (commute, low mortgage rate on current house, kids liked their friends and were settled).