Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. Thank you everyone for the advice. I've read mixed reviews about Wilson though. Is it fair to say that it has had some ups and downs? Is Deal considered better than Hardy? With the move, we would prefer to settle down as permanently as possible. We are not adverse to the suburbs in VA or MD, though we've always lived in cities (first NYC then Melbourne). We are completely comfortable to rent for a year (or years!), but would prefer that wherever we are is in the location where our kids will go to school longterm.
My son will be 5 as of September 2019. The twins will 1 year 11 months.
AU Park or Tenleytown. You wiill have lots of safety--Janney or Hearst, Deal, Wilson, lots of possibles for HS--charters, Walls, Ellington etc. and there are also some reasonable private schools. YOu are also thinking WAY too far ahead. Lots could change before HS including new school options--but you will be 'safe' in AU Park, and it meets your budget.
what are these reasonable private schools?
I live in AU Park and am interested.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. Thank you everyone for the advice. I've read mixed reviews about Wilson though. Is it fair to say that it has had some ups and downs? Is Deal considered better than Hardy? With the move, we would prefer to settle down as permanently as possible. We are not adverse to the suburbs in VA or MD, though we've always lived in cities (first NYC then Melbourne). We are completely comfortable to rent for a year (or years!), but would prefer that wherever we are is in the location where our kids will go to school longterm.
My son will be 5 as of September 2019. The twins will 1 year 11 months.
AU Park or Tenleytown. You wiill have lots of safety--Janney or Hearst, Deal, Wilson, lots of possibles for HS--charters, Walls, Ellington etc. and there are also some reasonable private schools. YOu are also thinking WAY too far ahead. Lots could change before HS including new school options--but you will be 'safe' in AU Park, and it meets your budget.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. Thanks everyone with your feedback. I'm frankly not too excited about Wilson because of its size. Looking for small and progressive options. Do people often do the lottery for HS? This whole lottery thing is very new to me.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. Thanks everyone with your feedback. I'm frankly not too excited about Wilson because of its size. Looking for small and progressive options. Do people often do the lottery for HS? This whole lottery thing is very new to me.
Most of the high schools in this area by neighborhood right (DC, MD, and VA) are very large like Wilson. The school’s you sound like you’re looking for are lottery only (see school without walls).
Walls is a good option but is actually an application school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. Thanks everyone with your feedback. I'm frankly not too excited about Wilson because of its size. Looking for small and progressive options. Do people often do the lottery for HS? This whole lottery thing is very new to me.
Most of the high schools in this area by neighborhood right (DC, MD, and VA) are very large like Wilson. The school’s you sound like you’re looking for are lottery only (see school without walls).
Anonymous wrote:OP here. Thanks everyone with your feedback. I'm frankly not too excited about Wilson because of its size. Looking for small and progressive options. Do people often do the lottery for HS? This whole lottery thing is very new to me.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. Thanks everyone with your feedback. I'm frankly not too excited about Wilson because of its size. Looking for small and progressive options. Do people often do the lottery for HS? This whole lottery thing is very new to me.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wilson is a big school. There are very rich and very poor kids from various parts of the city (those who live out of bounds got in to the school or its feeders through the lottery). Some kids are going to be fine there and others may feel lost or intimidated or just gravitate towards the worst-behaved peers. Since your kid is 6 there's no way to know precisely what she'll be like at 16.
If Wilson isn't your preference in the future you can do the lottery for charters or selective admissions schools. But if you want a guarantee of a high school with higher test scores and wealthier demographics you are going to have to look outside of DC.
+1. Wilson is as good as you can get for a school in Washington, DC that you access by virtue of where you live. Deal has been stronger than Hardy, it's much larger. But Hardy is gaining quickly. By the time your kids are ready they will be equally strong.
If you want a better public, guaranteed option, you should consider North Arlington in Virginia or the Bethesda area of Montgomery County Maryland (start with schools in the boundary for Whitman High School). Neither of those suburban areas are a very difficult commute to the city and are in your price range with less uncertanty.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. Thank you everyone for the advice. I've read mixed reviews about Wilson though. Is it fair to say that it has had some ups and downs? Is Deal considered better than Hardy? With the move, we would prefer to settle down as permanently as possible. We are not adverse to the suburbs in VA or MD, though we've always lived in cities (first NYC then Melbourne). We are completely comfortable to rent for a year (or years!), but would prefer that wherever we are is in the location where our kids will go to school longterm.
My son will be 5 as of September 2019. The twins will 1 year 11 months.
AU Park or Tenleytown. You wiill have lots of safety--Janney or Hearst, Deal, Wilson, lots of possibles for HS--charters, Walls, Ellington etc. and there are also some reasonable private schools. YOu are also thinking WAY too far ahead. Lots could change before HS including new school options--but you will be 'safe' in AU Park, and it meets your budget.
THANK YOU for your advice. I am probably thinking too far ahead! I think since we know the HS where my daughter would be going if we stayed in Australia so well, it's so hard to move without "knowing" all of the details... but I think I need to have a bit of faith and also things will definitely change in the next eight years. Anonymous wrote:OP here. Thank you everyone for the advice. I've read mixed reviews about Wilson though. Is it fair to say that it has had some ups and downs? Is Deal considered better than Hardy? With the move, we would prefer to settle down as permanently as possible. We are not adverse to the suburbs in VA or MD, though we've always lived in cities (first NYC then Melbourne). We are completely comfortable to rent for a year (or years!), but would prefer that wherever we are is in the location where our kids will go to school longterm.
My son will be 5 as of September 2019. The twins will 1 year 11 months.
Anonymous wrote:Wilson is a big school. There are very rich and very poor kids from various parts of the city (those who live out of bounds got in to the school or its feeders through the lottery). Some kids are going to be fine there and others may feel lost or intimidated or just gravitate towards the worst-behaved peers. Since your kid is 6 there's no way to know precisely what she'll be like at 16.
If Wilson isn't your preference in the future you can do the lottery for charters or selective admissions schools. But if you want a guarantee of a high school with higher test scores and wealthier demographics you are going to have to look outside of DC.