Anonymous wrote:maybe something feeding into Ashlawn? I looked at the demographics of all the schools in Arlington, trying to find something that had maybe 50% white and 50% mix of other. (we're caucasian, but wanted my daughter to grow up knowing some kids who weren't, and a lot of schools in Arlington are either 90% white or 80% hispanic.) Ashlawn came up as one of the few schools in North Arlington that had a larger number of AA kids. (Hispanic and Asian are much more typical here.) Look in Bonair/Bluemont, I think - the boundaries seem to be South of Wilson, North of 50/Carlin Springs and West of Glebe. That area also has the benefits of being relatively close-in to Ballston - metro, etc.
Anonymous wrote:Arlington has done a very good job of ridding itself of lower income, high need AA families and Hispanic families through economic discrimination.
this here. Anyone who has lived here for 15 or more years will remember the Arlington of car lots, WW2 garden apts. and cheepy pho places. I would add "fixed income seniors and rental apt. vets" to the above list -- it's not about skin hue, it's about revenue. A lily white senior retired Navy civilian in a subsidized apt. is not giving the county the $$ that a 32 yr old, 2-law firm couple is going to kick in. The latter, for some reason, all seem to be white and Asian. Their black and Hispanic white law firm counterparts (of which I am one, BTW) clearly prefer points east and north. Say, Rockville or Silver Spring or Colonial Village in the District.
Arlington has done a very good job of ridding itself of lower income, high need AA families and Hispanic families through economic discrimination.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:don't pick a place by being racist and looking for "diversity" pick it based on income, working professionals and test scores.
Unfortunately that doesn't work for those of us in the minority. Believe it or not most people want to live someplace where they and their children see some people who look like them. I'm guessing that's not something you have a clue about.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'd be interested in the answer to this as well. The PP mentions S Arlington, but I'm more interested in N Arlington. I'm AA and we lived in N Arlington before we had kids. We loved it (we were in the Courthouse area), but we were always struck by how lily white the area was. We'd be interested in moving back to the area, but don't want to raise our kids somewhere they would be the only AA kids. Are there any AA families in N Arlington? I mean, I'm sure there's one or two, but are there any neighborhoods with more?
I live in North Arlington.
I don't know how diverse you want exactly, and a lot of people are throwing Glebe at you as an example of a diverse school. I suppose relative to the others, it may be, but it's not exactly a bastion of diversity.
http://virginia.webschoolpro.com/glebe-elementary-school_VA0130070100/school-enrollment-characteristics.html
57 black kids in a school of 459 students (of which 275 are white).
Figure some of those kids are almost certainly siblings, and that reduces the number of black families. I don't really think you'll find a lot of childless black households in the area.
That said, this is proof that your kids won't necessarily be the only black kid in the class, but there's more than a decent chance he will be. That's less than 10 black kids per grade, over how many classrooms?
Another thing to consider is that of the North Arlington schools, Glebe ES's reputation is relatively poor. I'm not saying it is deserved, I'm saying that's how it's perceived.