Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Parents of girls on the Hill, what parochials do you go to? It's odd how there are several options nearby for boys but where is the girls' school?
I suspect this is part of the reason Banneker is like 75% girls.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Parents of girls on the Hill, what parochials do you go to? It's odd how there are several options nearby for boys but where is the girls' school?
CH parents of girls who aren't OK with their DC public middle school options and don't want to move but are OK with parochial school tend to commute to NW or Arlington for co-ed parochial middle schools. They go to St. Patricks, Our Lady of Victory or Sacred Heart in NW, St. Thomas. St. Ann or St. Agnes in VA.
Anonymous wrote:Parents of girls on the Hill, what parochials do you go to? It's odd how there are several options nearby for boys but where is the girls' school?
Anonymous wrote:Parents of girls on the Hill, what parochials do you go to? It's odd how there are several options nearby for boys but where is the girls' school?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Right, don't plan on getting into BASIS.
Giving up one's happy life on Cap Hill/community mainly so your kid can attend a high powered middle school in the burbs seems nuts. Same with forking out for a pricey private you can scarcely afford or commuting to DCI.
Not nuts when you have a secure path from middle school to 12th in the burbs at a much better school with high performing peer groups with better facilities, extracurriculars and sports.
What exactly is your plan for high school?
The truth is that lots of families on the Hill can afford 4 years of private or, at least, parochial HS if they need to. That is the plan of at least 50% of the UMC 2-3 kid families I know at our Hill IB ES (my oldest is rising 4th, so this is a frequent topic of convo). Nearly everyone plans to lottery for Latin x 2 and most for BASIS (though quite a few prefer BASIS, mostly the high achievers); for those who don’t get in, I’d say 3/4ths are planning to head to SH. The rest will move, head private or head to ITS if they can (I’ve also heard CHML, 2R and ST as back ups, but ITS seems to be the preferred charter backup). Then folks without a HS option (plus quite a few who have one) are hoping for Walls or, for a few, DE or Banneker or planning to go private/parochial. Some recent UMC families got some money from Gonzaga and SJC, so those are ones I’ve heard recently. 2 grads with younger sibs are headed to GDS and NCS. I think if people stick it out for middle, they don’t move for HS.
THIS. We'd have gone for one of the Latins or BASIS if we'd been admitted from 4th grade, or Inspired if were were admitted from 5th. We're making due with SH and planning for parochial HS, like most of our CH friends who also struck out in the charter lotteries. We supplement extensively for humanities at SH, not the end of the world.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Right, don't plan on getting into BASIS.
Giving up one's happy life on Cap Hill/community mainly so your kid can attend a high powered middle school in the burbs seems nuts. Same with forking out for a pricey private you can scarcely afford or commuting to DCI.
Not nuts when you have a secure path from middle school to 12th in the burbs at a much better school with high performing peer groups with better facilities, extracurriculars and sports.
What exactly is your plan for high school?
The truth is that lots of families on the Hill can afford 4 years of private or, at least, parochial HS if they need to. That is the plan of at least 50% of the UMC 2-3 kid families I know at our Hill IB ES (my oldest is rising 4th, so this is a frequent topic of convo). Nearly everyone plans to lottery for Latin x 2 and most for BASIS (though quite a few prefer BASIS, mostly the high achievers); for those who don’t get in, I’d say 3/4ths are planning to head to SH. The rest will move, head private or head to ITS if they can (I’ve also heard CHML, 2R and ST as back ups, but ITS seems to be the preferred charter backup). Then folks without a HS option (plus quite a few who have one) are hoping for Walls or, for a few, DE or Banneker or planning to go private/parochial. Some recent UMC families got some money from Gonzaga and SJC, so those are ones I’ve heard recently. 2 grads with younger sibs are headed to GDS and NCS. I think if people stick it out for middle, they don’t move for HS.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Right, don't plan on getting into BASIS.
Giving up one's happy life on Cap Hill/community mainly so your kid can attend a high powered middle school in the burbs seems nuts. Same with forking out for a pricey private you can scarcely afford or commuting to DCI.
Not nuts when you have a secure path from middle school to 12th in the burbs at a much better school with high performing peer groups with better facilities, extracurriculars and sports.
What exactly is your plan for high school?
The truth is that lots of families on the Hill can afford 4 years of private or, at least, parochial HS if they need to. That is the plan of at least 50% of the UMC 2-3 kid families I know at our Hill IB ES (my oldest is rising 4th, so this is a frequent topic of convo). Nearly everyone plans to lottery for Latin x 2 and most for BASIS (though quite a few prefer BASIS, mostly the high achievers); for those who don’t get in, I’d say 3/4ths are planning to head to SH. The rest will move, head private or head to ITS if they can (I’ve also heard CHML, 2R and ST as back ups, but ITS seems to be the preferred charter backup). Then folks without a HS option (plus quite a few who have one) are hoping for Walls or, for a few, DE or Banneker or planning to go private/parochial. Some recent UMC families got some money from Gonzaga and SJC, so those are ones I’ve heard recently. 2 grads with younger sibs are headed to GDS and NCS. I think if people stick it out for middle, they don’t move for HS.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Right, don't plan on getting into BASIS.
Giving up one's happy life on Cap Hill/community mainly so your kid can attend a high powered middle school in the burbs seems nuts. Same with forking out for a pricey private you can scarcely afford or commuting to DCI.
Not nuts when you have a secure path from middle school to 12th in the burbs at a much better school with high performing peer groups with better facilities, extracurriculars and sports.
What exactly is your plan for high school?
Anonymous wrote:Right, don't plan on getting into BASIS.
Giving up one's happy life on Cap Hill/community mainly so your kid can attend a high powered middle school in the burbs seems nuts. Same with forking out for a pricey private you can scarcely afford or commuting to DCI.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Spare us your OT yikes. Have you ever set foot in SH?
My kid tested out of 6th grade math at SH, took pre-algebra in 6th, algebra in 7th this year. That's BASIS level math. SH tracks extensively for math for the small number of kids who can handle acceleration. If your kid is advanced in math at SH they wind up in math classes with a dozen kids and great teachers. Really.
So the most advanced math offered at SH is BASIS standard math classes?
Why did more than a third of Basis students test below grade level on math on the latest PARCC?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Spare us your OT yikes. Have you ever set foot in SH?
My kid tested out of 6th grade math at SH, took pre-algebra in 6th, algebra in 7th this year. That's BASIS level math. SH tracks extensively for math for the small number of kids who can handle acceleration. If your kid is advanced in math at SH they wind up in math classes with a dozen kids and great teachers. Really.
So the most advanced math offered at SH is BASIS standard math classes?