Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No one has said that Wheaton is on its way. up at all. Development is NOT booming and gang activity is a real problem. Its a VERY bad sign that all the development is going into Bethesda, close in Rockville and close-in Potomac. The areas in the east are basically being abandoned.
The elevator ready townhomes being built on McComas right next to Wheaton Mall beg to differ:
https://www.opaldc.com/themanors
The townhomes near the Metro pending in days beg to differ as well:
https://www.redfin.com/MD/Wheaton-Glenmont/11112-Amherst-Ave-20902/home/11202004
As do the large office buildings and concert space being built outside Wheaton Metro as we speak:
https://www.wheatonmd.org/discover/redevelopment
If you don't think development is booming you obviously haven't been around there in a couple years. Even its detractors can see the cranes in the sky and new apartment and office buildings coming up. An area with a mall, that kind of eclectic mix of ethnic restaurants and a Metro so close to each other is hard to come by in the area and is very desirable to a lot of people.
Didn't Wheaton HS just beat out all the other W's for some prestigous award?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Woodward has room for 2700 seats, but I seriously doubt they'd fill it to capacity on day 1.
I'd imagine WJ will contribute 800-1000 students to Woodward. Around 700 to address it's overcrowding directly and shift a few hundred from Whitman to WJ to address overcrowding there too.
That still leaves 1700-1900 seats to fill at Woodward. The simplest solution is to fill them from the adjacent schools.
Since Einstein is around 700 over capacity it would likely contribute the lions share. I'd wager B-CC ends up giving 400-500 too, but 200 minimum to offset future overcrowding at B-CC.
Now Northwood is right next to Blair and it's expansion creates 1200 additional seats there. Roughly 700 are needed to address Northwood's overcrowding by 2022. That means 400-500 will likely go to address Blair's overcrowding. Now Blair will need around 700 total seats so they'll a couple hundred short. Those seats will likely come from the two schools directly adjacent to its West. Those schools are also adjacent to Woodward so it's easy to make the room. Sure the County could put the burden entirely on Einstein but why would B-CC get a pass?
It's all total speculation so I wouldn't get worked up over it. Do you remember those puzzle games you played as a kid that you solve by shifting the blocks? If your goal is to optimally fill these schools, make minimal changes to the overall map without busing people across the county that's how it could play out.
Hard to guess what things will look like in four or more years, but this a practical way to address the overcrowding with current and planned resources.
Except that BCC is getting an addition that will keep it at capacity for at least another decade. Someone here really wants to blow up the BCC zone, I don't know why since it's already the most diverse Bethesda HS and thanks to the addition and a new middle school, the BCC zone won't have overcrowding problems anymore. Woodward will be mainly drawn from WJ and the overcrowded DCC schools. If they want to do some boundary tinkering to shake up the rich, white Bethesda crowd, MCPS is more likely to pull an elementary out of Whitman into Woodward.
The county's projections show B-CC overcapacity even with its addition by 2022 when Woodward opens. It's also easy to shift kids around its boundary to solve overcrowding with neighboring schools given its proximity to Woodward..
I thought the same thing until I looked at the map. The area zoned for Burning Tree Elementary is right next to the area zoned for Ashburton and just as close to Woodward as all the potential BCC elementaries. This is going to be fun![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Woodward has room for 2700 seats, but I seriously doubt they'd fill it to capacity on day 1.
I'd imagine WJ will contribute 800-1000 students to Woodward. Around 700 to address it's overcrowding directly and shift a few hundred from Whitman to WJ to address overcrowding there too.
That still leaves 1700-1900 seats to fill at Woodward. The simplest solution is to fill them from the adjacent schools.
Since Einstein is around 700 over capacity it would likely contribute the lions share. I'd wager B-CC ends up giving 400-500 too, but 200 minimum to offset future overcrowding at B-CC.
Now Northwood is right next to Blair and it's expansion creates 1200 additional seats there. Roughly 700 are needed to address Northwood's overcrowding by 2022. That means 400-500 will likely go to address Blair's overcrowding. Now Blair will need around 700 total seats so they'll a couple hundred short. Those seats will likely come from the two schools directly adjacent to its West. Those schools are also adjacent to Woodward so it's easy to make the room. Sure the County could put the burden entirely on Einstein but why would B-CC get a pass?
It's all total speculation so I wouldn't get worked up over it. Do you remember those puzzle games you played as a kid that you solve by shifting the blocks? If your goal is to optimally fill these schools, make minimal changes to the overall map without busing people across the county that's how it could play out.
Hard to guess what things will look like in four or more years, but this a practical way to address the overcrowding with current and planned resources.
Except that BCC is getting an addition that will keep it at capacity for at least another decade. Someone here really wants to blow up the BCC zone, I don't know why since it's already the most diverse Bethesda HS and thanks to the addition and a new middle school, the BCC zone won't have overcrowding problems anymore. Woodward will be mainly drawn from WJ and the overcrowded DCC schools. If they want to do some boundary tinkering to shake up the rich, white Bethesda crowd, MCPS is more likely to pull an elementary out of Whitman into Woodward.
The county's projections show B-CC overcapacity even with its addition by 2022 when Woodward opens. It's also easy to shift kids around its boundary to solve overcrowding with neighboring schools given its proximity to Woodward..
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Woodward has room for 2700 seats, but I seriously doubt they'd fill it to capacity on day 1.
I'd imagine WJ will contribute 800-1000 students to Woodward. Around 700 to address it's overcrowding directly and shift a few hundred from Whitman to WJ to address overcrowding there too.
That still leaves 1700-1900 seats to fill at Woodward. The simplest solution is to fill them from the adjacent schools.
Since Einstein is around 700 over capacity it would likely contribute the lions share. I'd wager B-CC ends up giving 400-500 too, but 200 minimum to offset future overcrowding at B-CC.
Now Northwood is right next to Blair and it's expansion creates 1200 additional seats there. Roughly 700 are needed to address Northwood's overcrowding by 2022. That means 400-500 will likely go to address Blair's overcrowding. Now Blair will need around 700 total seats so they'll a couple hundred short. Those seats will likely come from the two schools directly adjacent to its West. Those schools are also adjacent to Woodward so it's easy to make the room. Sure the County could put the burden entirely on Einstein but why would B-CC get a pass?
It's all total speculation so I wouldn't get worked up over it. Do you remember those puzzle games you played as a kid that you solve by shifting the blocks? If your goal is to optimally fill these schools, make minimal changes to the overall map without busing people across the county that's how it could play out.
Hard to guess what things will look like in four or more years, but this a practical way to address the overcrowding with current and planned resources.
Except that BCC is getting an addition that will keep it at capacity for at least another decade. Someone here really wants to blow up the BCC zone, I don't know why since it's already the most diverse Bethesda HS and thanks to the addition and a new middle school, the BCC zone won't have overcrowding problems anymore. Woodward will be mainly drawn from WJ and the overcrowded DCC schools. If they want to do some boundary tinkering to shake up the rich, white Bethesda crowd, MCPS is more likely to pull an elementary out of Whitman into Woodward.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Woodward has room for 2700 seats, but I seriously doubt they'd fill it to capacity on day 1.
I'd imagine WJ will contribute 800-1000 students to Woodward. Around 700 to address it's overcrowding directly and shift a few hundred from Whitman to WJ to address overcrowding there too.
That still leaves 1700-1900 seats to fill at Woodward. The simplest solution is to fill them from the adjacent schools.
Since Einstein is around 700 over capacity it would likely contribute the lions share. I'd wager B-CC ends up giving 400-500 too, but 200 minimum to offset future overcrowding at B-CC.
Now Northwood is right next to Blair and it's expansion creates 1200 additional seats there. Roughly 700 are needed to address Northwood's overcrowding by 2022. That means 400-500 will likely go to address Blair's overcrowding. Now Blair will need around 700 total seats so they'll a couple hundred short. Those seats will likely come from the two schools directly adjacent to its West. Those schools are also adjacent to Woodward so it's easy to make the room. Sure the County could put the burden entirely on Einstein but why would B-CC get a pass?
It's all total speculation so I wouldn't get worked up over it. Do you remember those puzzle games you played as a kid that you solve by shifting the blocks? If your goal is to optimally fill these schools, make minimal changes to the overall map without busing people across the county that's how it could play out.
Hard to guess what things will look like in four or more years, but this a practical way to address the overcrowding with current and planned resources.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No one has said that Wheaton is on its way. up at all. Development is NOT booming and gang activity is a real problem. Its a VERY bad sign that all the development is going into Bethesda, close in Rockville and close-in Potomac. The areas in the east are basically being abandoned.
The elevator ready townhomes being built on McComas right next to Wheaton Mall beg to differ:
https://www.opaldc.com/themanors
The townhomes near the Metro pending in days beg to differ as well:
https://www.redfin.com/MD/Wheaton-Glenmont/11112-Amherst-Ave-20902/home/11202004
As do the large office buildings and concert space being built outside Wheaton Metro as we speak:
https://www.wheatonmd.org/discover/redevelopment
If you don't think development is booming you obviously haven't been around there in a couple years. Even its detractors can see the cranes in the sky and new apartment and office buildings coming up. An area with a mall, that kind of eclectic mix of ethnic restaurants and a Metro so close to each other is hard to come by in the area and is very desirable to a lot of people.
Didn't Wheaton HS just beat out all the other W's for some prestigous award?
Don't know, but all of these homes are zoned for Einstein. Most of the area around Wheaton Metro is, strangely enough, not zoned for Wheaton HS.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Officials have said in multiple meetings that WJ kids are not going to be zoned to Einstein because of this change. And even if they did rezone two elementary schools to Einstein, those would be Kensington Parkwood and Garrett Park and that would, of course, increase Einstein's test scores tremendously. And like PPs have said, the area around the Wheaton area is on its way up, not down. Development around there is booming and housing prices are following suite.
Exactly - both Einstein and WJ will both be around 800 over capacity in 2022. When Woodward opens, it will provide space for kids from both of these nearby schools and still have room for 1000 more!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No one has said that Wheaton is on its way. up at all. Development is NOT booming and gang activity is a real problem. Its a VERY bad sign that all the development is going into Bethesda, close in Rockville and close-in Potomac. The areas in the east are basically being abandoned.
The elevator ready townhomes being built on McComas right next to Wheaton Mall beg to differ:
https://www.opaldc.com/themanors
The townhomes near the Metro pending in days beg to differ as well:
https://www.redfin.com/MD/Wheaton-Glenmont/11112-Amherst-Ave-20902/home/11202004
As do the large office buildings and concert space being built outside Wheaton Metro as we speak:
https://www.wheatonmd.org/discover/redevelopment
If you don't think development is booming you obviously haven't been around there in a couple years. Even its detractors can see the cranes in the sky and new apartment and office buildings coming up. An area with a mall, that kind of eclectic mix of ethnic restaurants and a Metro so close to each other is hard to come by in the area and is very desirable to a lot of people.
Didn't Wheaton HS just beat out all the other W's for some prestigous award?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No one has said that Wheaton is on its way. up at all. Development is NOT booming and gang activity is a real problem. Its a VERY bad sign that all the development is going into Bethesda, close in Rockville and close-in Potomac. The areas in the east are basically being abandoned.
The elevator ready townhomes being built on McComas right next to Wheaton Mall beg to differ:
https://www.opaldc.com/themanors
The townhomes near the Metro pending in days beg to differ as well:
https://www.redfin.com/MD/Wheaton-Glenmont/11112-Amherst-Ave-20902/home/11202004
As do the large office buildings and concert space being built outside Wheaton Metro as we speak:
https://www.wheatonmd.org/discover/redevelopment
If you don't think development is booming you obviously haven't been around there in a couple years. Even its detractors can see the cranes in the sky and new apartment and office buildings coming up. An area with a mall, that kind of eclectic mix of ethnic restaurants and a Metro so close to each other is hard to come by in the area and is very desirable to a lot of people.
Anonymous wrote:
Woodward has room for 2700 seats, but I seriously doubt they'd fill it to capacity on day 1.
I'd imagine WJ will contribute 800-1000 students to Woodward. Around 700 to address it's overcrowding directly and shift a few hundred from Whitman to WJ to address overcrowding there too.
That still leaves 1700-1900 seats to fill at Woodward. The simplest solution is to fill them from the adjacent schools.
Since Einstein is around 700 over capacity it would likely contribute the lions share. I'd wager B-CC ends up giving 400-500 too, but 200 minimum to offset future overcrowding at B-CC.
Now Northwood is right next to Blair and it's expansion creates 1200 additional seats there. Roughly 700 are needed to address Northwood's overcrowding by 2022. That means 400-500 will likely go to address Blair's overcrowding. Now Blair will need around 700 total seats so they'll a couple hundred short. Those seats will likely come from the two schools directly adjacent to its West. Those schools are also adjacent to Woodward so it's easy to make the room. Sure the County could put the burden entirely on Einstein but why would B-CC get a pass?
It's all total speculation so I wouldn't get worked up over it. Do you remember those puzzle games you played as a kid that you solve by shifting the blocks? If your goal is to optimally fill these schools, make minimal changes to the overall map without busing people across the county that's how it could play out.
Anonymous wrote:No one has said that Wheaton is on its way. up at all. Development is NOT booming and gang activity is a real problem. Its a VERY bad sign that all the development is going into Bethesda, close in Rockville and close-in Potomac. The areas in the east are basically being abandoned.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You'er delusional if you think houses in the WJ area are going to decrease by $100,000. If schools were so central to housing prices homes in Takoma Park wouldn't be selling for $1M. That's because it's about location first and foremost, and traffic is going to be much worse 3-4 years from now when Woodward opens, which is going to make location even more important.
OK just stop. I like Takoma Park but homes are not going for 1M. There are sometimes rare, large historical houses that will occasionally get up there but the overwhelming majority of houses that are sold, sell for much, much less. In Bethesda, tear downs sell for 1M and the high unicorn sales are up in the multi millions. In WJ there are some homes at the bottom of that area's scale in the 700s.
A 10% drop for an area being rezoned from a top W school to Einstein is actually being very conservative. A family that buys a 750K house in WJ that later becomes Einstein will be lucky to get 675K for the the house.
100% agree with this.
Officials have said in multiple meetings that WJ kids are not going to be zoned to Einstein because of this change. And even if they did rezone two elementary schools to Einstein, those would be Kensington Parkwood and Garrett Park and that would, of course, increase Einstein's test scores tremendously. And like PPs have said, the area around the Wheaton area is on its way up, not down. Development around there is booming and housing prices are following suite.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Officials have said in multiple meetings that WJ kids are not going to be zoned to Einstein because of this change. And even if they did rezone two elementary schools to Einstein, those would be Kensington Parkwood and Garrett Park and that would, of course, increase Einstein's test scores tremendously. And like PPs have said, the area around the Wheaton area is on its way up, not down. Development around there is booming and housing prices are following suite.
Exactly - both Einstein and WJ will both be around 800 over capacity in 2022. When Woodward opens, it will provide space for kids from both of these nearby schools and still have room for 1000 more!