Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:All I'm going to say is that if you move to the Wakefield Forest area there is a good chance you'll get rezoned to Poe/Annandale in a few years.
Not going to happen. They just rezoned people from Wakefield Forest out of Poe/Annandale. They're not going to move them back after all that.
Your wishing this does not make it so. The boundary shift was in 2012. The relevant policy (Policy 8130.7) states "Adjustments shall be made without respect to magisterial districts or postal addresses and, whenever possible, shall not affect the same occupied dwellings any more often than once in three years."
The SB's obligation is to all the kids, not just those in Wakefield Forest who think their property values might take a hit if moved or moved back to Annandale.
Given that they just did a boundary adjustment right there, and the school board has bigger fish to fry than dealing with minor overcrowding at Frost and Woodson (like more serious overcrowding at McLean, Marshall, Oakton, Centreville, West Potomac, Carson, Hughes, Kilmer, Longfellow, Jackson, Glasgow), I still think it's not going to happen. I guess we'll see.
Anonymous wrote:Over my dead body would I let one of my children attend a school in the Falls Church HS pyramid. If you care at all about your children, MOVE.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:All I'm going to say is that if you move to the Wakefield Forest area there is a good chance you'll get rezoned to Poe/Annandale in a few years.
Not going to happen. They just rezoned people from Wakefield Forest out of Poe/Annandale. They're not going to move them back after all that.
Your wishing this does not make it so. The boundary shift was in 2012. The relevant policy (Policy 8130.7) states "Adjustments shall be made without respect to magisterial districts or postal addresses and, whenever possible, shall not affect the same occupied dwellings any more often than once in three years."
The SB's obligation is to all the kids, not just those in Wakefield Forest who think their property values might take a hit if moved or moved back to Annandale.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:All I'm going to say is that if you move to the Wakefield Forest area there is a good chance you'll get rezoned to Poe/Annandale in a few years.
Not going to happen. They just rezoned people from Wakefield Forest out of Poe/Annandale. They're not going to move them back after all that.
Anonymous wrote:All I'm going to say is that if you move to the Wakefield Forest area there is a good chance you'll get rezoned to Poe/Annandale in a few years.
Anonymous wrote:Over my dead body would I let one of my children attend a school in the Falls Church HS pyramid. If you care at all about your children, MOVE.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:FOR YEARS now my family been struggling with a major issue. Do we stay in our current house in a fairly low-income school pyramid or move just a mile away to a more affluent pyramid with a "great" reputation? Seriously, I have been questioning this for YEARS and cannot make a decision -- but there are other issues at play as well. I just want to get feedback from people, please only respond if you have good intentions and don't make nasty remarks!
I have 3 kids, oldest will be in kindergarten in 2016-2017 (so we have a year to decide). We are in a decent neighborhood in the Camelot/Luther Jackson/Falls Church HS pyramid. If we move to my father's neighborhood just a few miles away, we are in Wakefield Forest/Frost/Woodson pyramid. We can afford to do this, although moving requires we sell our home first, live with my dad for awhile while we wait for the right house to come on the market.
Anyway, our motivators for moving would be the following:
1. better schools (supposedly)
2. Closer to my ailing dad who I will have to care for
3. A nicer neighborhood with a more community feel (lots of social events, nice HOA, pool)
Anyway, I hear different things about the schools. Some tell me the lower income schools (like Luther Jackson/Falls Church) receive more resources, money, smaller classes, and that my child will have a better chance of "standing out" because not every kid is trying to be Captain of the football team and in honor society and in a million clubs. Basically, there are not as many over-achievers. Downside is that the parents are not as involved because many are working 2 or 3 jobs and have little to NO time to be involved with their kids' lives at school. The kids my kids would be friends with may come from poverty.... and some may come from unconventional home situations like many families living in one apartment. There will be much more diversity, but Falls Church HS is very small, for example - maybe only 1000 kids? But the school has not been renovated mostly bc the parents don't push for it, because they aren't involved.
On the other hand, if we move, We would send our kids to Wakefield Forest (which I love), but then to Frost in Woodson which seems to be filled with overachievers and high-income kids. The competition seems to be intense, class sizes are larger, less diversity, but is considered one of the finest schools in the area. My kids may not have the chance to "stand out" because most the kids are being cheered on my motivated parents. That being said, my kids would be hanging out with kids from more affluent backgrounds with more involved parents. Woodson also has seen suicides recently and is a HUGE school. Seems like a child could easily get lost there.
Two other issues -- if we move to Woodson district, my kids could walk to Wakefield Forest instead of bussing it. I would be close to my ailing dad, making it easier for me to care for him (along with 3 kids), and we would live in a slightly nicer neighborhood -- houses a little nicer, more parks, pool, etc.
Mostly, I would like opinions about the school situation. What is your opinion on a low-income pyramid vs. affluent pyramid?
Anonymous wrote:FOR YEARS now my family been struggling with a major issue. Do we stay in our current house in a fairly low-income school pyramid or move just a mile away to a more affluent pyramid with a "great" reputation? Seriously, I have been questioning this for YEARS and cannot make a decision -- but there are other issues at play as well. I just want to get feedback from people, please only respond if you have good intentions and don't make nasty remarks!
I have 3 kids, oldest will be in kindergarten in 2016-2017 (so we have a year to decide). We are in a decent neighborhood in the Camelot/Luther Jackson/Falls Church HS pyramid. If we move to my father's neighborhood just a few miles away, we are in Wakefield Forest/Frost/Woodson pyramid. We can afford to do this, although moving requires we sell our home first, live with my dad for awhile while we wait for the right house to come on the market.
Anyway, our motivators for moving would be the following:
1. better schools (supposedly)
2. Closer to my ailing dad who I will have to care for
3. A nicer neighborhood with a more community feel (lots of social events, nice HOA, pool)
Anyway, I hear different things about the schools. Some tell me the lower income schools (like Luther Jackson/Falls Church) receive more resources, money, smaller classes, and that my child will have a better chance of "standing out" because not every kid is trying to be Captain of the football team and in honor society and in a million clubs. Basically, there are not as many over-achievers. Downside is that the parents are not as involved because many are working 2 or 3 jobs and have little to NO time to be involved with their kids' lives at school. The kids my kids would be friends with may come from poverty.... and some may come from unconventional home situations like many families living in one apartment. There will be much more diversity, but Falls Church HS is very small, for example - maybe only 1000 kids? But the school has not been renovated mostly bc the parents don't push for it, because they aren't involved.
On the other hand, if we move, We would send our kids to Wakefield Forest (which I love), but then to Frost in Woodson which seems to be filled with overachievers and high-income kids. The competition seems to be intense, class sizes are larger, less diversity, but is considered one of the finest schools in the area. My kids may not have the chance to "stand out" because most the kids are being cheered on my motivated parents. That being said, my kids would be hanging out with kids from more affluent backgrounds with more involved parents. Woodson also has seen suicides recently and is a HUGE school. Seems like a child could easily get lost there.
Two other issues -- if we move to Woodson district, my kids could walk to Wakefield Forest instead of bussing it. I would be close to my ailing dad, making it easier for me to care for him (along with 3 kids), and we would live in a slightly nicer neighborhood -- houses a little nicer, more parks, pool, etc.
Mostly, I would like opinions about the school situation. What is your opinion on a low-income pyramid vs. affluent pyramid?
My child is "affluent," attending a "less affluent" high school with an enormously diverse student body, and stands out, and not in a good way. It is making our whole family miserable.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Falls Church HS is very small, for example - maybe only 1000 kids? But the school has not been renovated mostly bc the parents don't push for it, because they aren't involved.
This is a lie.
This was told to me by a staff member at Falls church high school. They also said the school board is screwed to favor the wealthier schools.
I faced this dilemma on a different scale when picking which university to attend. Make the move. It's better to have your child surrounded by peers who will challenge him/her, then be in a place where everything is too easy because teh other kids aren't keeping up.
Would you prefer your kid go to Princeton or Iowa State? They may find Princeton more difficult, but isn't that the point -- to be challenged?
Anonymous wrote:I faced this dilemma on a different scale when picking which university to attend. Make the move. It's better to have your child surrounded by peers who will challenge him/her, then be in a place where everything is too easy because teh other kids aren't keeping up.
Would you prefer your kid go to Princeton or Iowa State? They may find Princeton more difficult, but isn't that the point -- to be challenged?
WHAT!