Anonymous wrote:Your simple fact is pretty much wrong.
Think of it this way. The goal of getting admitted to a "better" college is to graduate from that college.
By attending a "lesser" enough HS to increase your DC's chances of admission to a "better" college, you hurt your DC's chances of graduating from the more difficult college.
"A kid in a "lesser" school district has better chances at better colleges, but not everyone realizes this simple fact."
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What is your household income?
$220k
How much are you paying for housing?
$500k house
Where do you live?
Kensington
What do you and your partner do for a living?
Journalist & unemployed
What school/school cluster and in what school system does your child attend?
Einstein cluster
Are you happy with the school and education?
Yes
If not, why not private school (or vice versa, why not public)?
N/a, happy with public
What are your school's pros and cons?
DCC consortium choice, great arts programs (music and performing arts), diversity, great teachers!
Love that kids can choose to enroll in challenging courses (IB, AP). In other places we have lived, enrollment in such courses required teacher recommendation.
If you could change schools, where would you go and why?
I wouldn't necessarily change schools, but now that my kids are teenagers they are trapped out here in the unwalkable suburbs. The whole family would prefer to live closer in to DC and near Metro.
I know this is off-topic , but I'm surprised a journalist's pulling in so much. 220K is a good salary, good for you!
DP here - That was my same thought when I read this!! What news organization pays that well? Nice gig PP!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What is your household income?
$220k
How much are you paying for housing?
$500k house
Where do you live?
Kensington
What do you and your partner do for a living?
Journalist & unemployed
What school/school cluster and in what school system does your child attend?
Einstein cluster
Are you happy with the school and education?
Yes
If not, why not private school (or vice versa, why not public)?
N/a, happy with public
What are your school's pros and cons?
DCC consortium choice, great arts programs (music and performing arts), diversity, great teachers!
Love that kids can choose to enroll in challenging courses (IB, AP). In other places we have lived, enrollment in such courses required teacher recommendation.
If you could change schools, where would you go and why?
I wouldn't necessarily change schools, but now that my kids are teenagers they are trapped out here in the unwalkable suburbs. The whole family would prefer to live closer in to DC and near Metro.
I know this is off-topic , but I'm surprised a journalist's pulling in so much. 220K is a good salary, good for you!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Trollin' down the river...
Not a troll. Just seems that the richer people are, the more they complain about the quality of the education. Was curious if it were true and at what SES that happens.
And this is DCUM. Since when does anyone here care about being polite.
Op, do you know the difference between wealth and income? Because truly wealthy people don't need ordinary income. Or public schools. Dual income, highly educated white collar couples who pay full freight taxes, mortgages, student loans and manage to save some are not evil. And it's not evil to have an opinion on the quality of anything. bFD.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does your socio-economic status inform how you feel about your child's school/education?
No. Normal people don't use phrases like, "your socioeconomic status," much less give a shit about letting it "inform how we feel."
Anonymous wrote:Does your socio-economic status inform how you feel about your child's school/education?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Trollin' down the river...
Not a troll. Just seems that the richer people are, the more they complain about the quality of the education. Was curious if it were true and at what SES that happens.
And this is DCUM. Since when does anyone here care about being polite.
Anonymous wrote:Trollin' down the river...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does your socio-economic status inform how you feel about your child's school/education?
I often see people on DCUM trashing certain school systems or school clusters. Just wondering if income and neighborhood matter when it comes to how happy people are with the school and their child's education.
What is your household income? How much are you paying for housing? Where do you live? What do you and your partner do for a living?
What school/school cluster and in what school system does your child attend?
Are you happy with the school and education? If not, why not private school (or vice versa, why not public)? What are your school's pros and cons?
If you could change schools, where would you go and why?
$250,000
Rockville
Journalist and Attorney
My child is in private school because I thought my particular cluster (Wootton) was too competitive and hard core.
We are going to move upcounty to find a lower cost of living, a more middle class neighborhood. My son will go to public high school. I will look for diversity, especially economic. I do not like the neighborhoods that have so much money.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does your socio-economic status inform how you feel about your child's school/education?
I often see people on DCUM trashing certain school systems or school clusters. Just wondering if income and neighborhood matter when it comes to how happy people are with the school and their child's education.
What is your household income? How much are you paying for housing? Where do you live? What do you and your partner do for a living?
What school/school cluster and in what school system does your child attend?
Are you happy with the school and education? If not, why not private school (or vice versa, why not public)? What are your school's pros and cons?
If you could change schools, where would you go and why?
TBH, I am not going to answer 20 questions. LOL. I think that human nature causes people to defend their own choices. A lot of people paid a premium to be in certain clusters based on the "ratings" of those schools. So of course, those people are going to believe that those schools offer something that you cannot get in other schools in the county. We have an HHI that would have allowed us to live in one of the coveted clusters. We actually chose to buy a bigger house in the cluster we were in. I defend that choice by saying, in retrospect, my kids were able to get into and attend the same colleges that the other kids did - and its true. So I would say that I did not need to spend the extra money to move because my kids got the same opportunities at the end of the day. Once again, defense of choice. That is what it is all about.
Anonymous wrote:Does your socio-economic status inform how you feel about your child's school/education?
I often see people on DCUM trashing certain school systems or school clusters. Just wondering if income and neighborhood matter when it comes to how happy people are with the school and their child's education.
What is your household income? How much are you paying for housing? Where do you live? What do you and your partner do for a living?
What school/school cluster and in what school system does your child attend?
Are you happy with the school and education? If not, why not private school (or vice versa, why not public)? What are your school's pros and cons?
If you could change schools, where would you go and why?