Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:To the poster that is having trouble forming a coherent thought.
What an interesting link! I live in one of the largest neighborhoods in Arlington. The median age of my neighborhood is 33.
So. Many. Houses. Have sold over the last couple of years. I'm trying to think who has been selling and who has been buying. Why, I believe it is older homeowners selling, and young families buying. Hmmm. I've lived here for 10 years, certainly I've seen this trend of young families moving once kids hit school age...
Huh. Nope. They aren't selling and moving. They are staying, even though this hood is zoned to one of the "worst" elementary schools. I guess people either tough it out, or go private for a couple of years. Doesn't seem worth the move out of a neighborhood (full of young families) that you love.
Well the demographics and FARM rates of the elementary school don't match your narrative
#StatsSoHard
NP here- We are another family with 2 professional parents that live in South Arlington. We chose to send our kids to Catholic school through 8th grade but our oldest is now at Wakefield and we do not have a single complaint. Our neighborhood is also full of families with school age kids. Many of them have done the lottery or the Spanish Immersion programs for elementary school but have every intention of sending their children to Wakefield. I also know of more than 8 other families that are doing what we have done.
In 2015, Wakefield High ranked worse than 58.1% of high schools in Virginia. It also ranked 3rd among 4 ranked high schools in the Arlington County Public Schools District.
So you are saying that of 4 ranked high schools, Wakefield came in 3rd? That seems pretty good. I would have assumed it would have been fourth. We plan to lottery or go private through 5th grade. Then we will be doing TJ and Wakefield. I'm really not concerned about how all of the students in Va are performing. I'm only concerned how my kid is performing. Extremely confident and comfortable with Wakefield.
-- millenial family
You must have had your kids early if you are a millenial with a high schooler.
-- millenial who's relative went north a few years a go due to south experiences in elementary school
Please reread the post. PLAN to lottery or private through 5th. Then TJ. Then Wakefield. We knew there was an issues with the elementary when we bought. I think it's terrible the way they've allowed the poverty concentrate in this county, but we're aren't planning to be "the change". We never intended to use the neighborhood school. 5 years of private it very doable for us.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:To the poster that is having trouble forming a coherent thought.
What an interesting link! I live in one of the largest neighborhoods in Arlington. The median age of my neighborhood is 33.
So. Many. Houses. Have sold over the last couple of years. I'm trying to think who has been selling and who has been buying. Why, I believe it is older homeowners selling, and young families buying. Hmmm. I've lived here for 10 years, certainly I've seen this trend of young families moving once kids hit school age...
Huh. Nope. They aren't selling and moving. They are staying, even though this hood is zoned to one of the "worst" elementary schools. I guess people either tough it out, or go private for a couple of years. Doesn't seem worth the move out of a neighborhood (full of young families) that you love.
Well the demographics and FARM rates of the elementary school don't match your narrative
#StatsSoHard
NP here- We are another family with 2 professional parents that live in South Arlington. We chose to send our kids to Catholic school through 8th grade but our oldest is now at Wakefield and we do not have a single complaint. Our neighborhood is also full of families with school age kids. Many of them have done the lottery or the Spanish Immersion programs for elementary school but have every intention of sending their children to Wakefield. I also know of more than 8 other families that are doing what we have done.
In 2015, Wakefield High ranked worse than 58.1% of high schools in Virginia. It also ranked 3rd among 4 ranked high schools in the Arlington County Public Schools District.
So you are saying that of 4 ranked high schools, Wakefield came in 3rd? That seems pretty good. I would have assumed it would have been fourth. We plan to lottery or go private through 5th grade. Then we will be doing TJ and Wakefield. I'm really not concerned about how all of the students in Va are performing. I'm only concerned how my kid is performing. Extremely confident and comfortable with Wakefield.
-- millenial family
You must have had your kids early if you are a millenial with a high schooler.
-- millenial who's relative went north a few years a go due to south experiences in elementary school
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:To the poster that is having trouble forming a coherent thought.
What an interesting link! I live in one of the largest neighborhoods in Arlington. The median age of my neighborhood is 33.
So. Many. Houses. Have sold over the last couple of years. I'm trying to think who has been selling and who has been buying. Why, I believe it is older homeowners selling, and young families buying. Hmmm. I've lived here for 10 years, certainly I've seen this trend of young families moving once kids hit school age...
Huh. Nope. They aren't selling and moving. They are staying, even though this hood is zoned to one of the "worst" elementary schools. I guess people either tough it out, or go private for a couple of years. Doesn't seem worth the move out of a neighborhood (full of young families) that you love.
Well the demographics and FARM rates of the elementary school don't match your narrative
#StatsSoHard
NP here- We are another family with 2 professional parents that live in South Arlington. We chose to send our kids to Catholic school through 8th grade but our oldest is now at Wakefield and we do not have a single complaint. Our neighborhood is also full of families with school age kids. Many of them have done the lottery or the Spanish Immersion programs for elementary school but have every intention of sending their children to Wakefield. I also know of more than 8 other families that are doing what we have done.
In 2015, Wakefield High ranked worse than 58.1% of high schools in Virginia. It also ranked 3rd among 4 ranked high schools in the Arlington County Public Schools District.
So you are saying that of 4 ranked high schools, Wakefield came in 3rd? That seems pretty good. I would have assumed it would have been fourth. We plan to lottery or go private through 5th grade. Then we will be doing TJ and Wakefield. I'm really not concerned about how all of the students in Va are performing. I'm only concerned how my kid is performing. Extremely confident and comfortable with Wakefield.
-- millenial family
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:To the poster that is having trouble forming a coherent thought.
What an interesting link! I live in one of the largest neighborhoods in Arlington. The median age of my neighborhood is 33.
So. Many. Houses. Have sold over the last couple of years. I'm trying to think who has been selling and who has been buying. Why, I believe it is older homeowners selling, and young families buying. Hmmm. I've lived here for 10 years, certainly I've seen this trend of young families moving once kids hit school age...
Huh. Nope. They aren't selling and moving. They are staying, even though this hood is zoned to one of the "worst" elementary schools. I guess people either tough it out, or go private for a couple of years. Doesn't seem worth the move out of a neighborhood (full of young families) that you love.
Well the demographics and FARM rates of the elementary school don't match your narrative
#StatsSoHard
NP here- We are another family with 2 professional parents that live in South Arlington. We chose to send our kids to Catholic school through 8th grade but our oldest is now at Wakefield and we do not have a single complaint. Our neighborhood is also full of families with school age kids. Many of them have done the lottery or the Spanish Immersion programs for elementary school but have every intention of sending their children to Wakefield. I also know of more than 8 other families that are doing what we have done.
In 2015, Wakefield High ranked worse than 58.1% of high schools in Virginia. It also ranked 3rd among 4 ranked high schools in the Arlington County Public Schools District.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:To the poster that is having trouble forming a coherent thought.
What an interesting link! I live in one of the largest neighborhoods in Arlington. The median age of my neighborhood is 33.
So. Many. Houses. Have sold over the last couple of years. I'm trying to think who has been selling and who has been buying. Why, I believe it is older homeowners selling, and young families buying. Hmmm. I've lived here for 10 years, certainly I've seen this trend of young families moving once kids hit school age...
Huh. Nope. They aren't selling and moving. They are staying, even though this hood is zoned to one of the "worst" elementary schools. I guess people either tough it out, or go private for a couple of years. Doesn't seem worth the move out of a neighborhood (full of young families) that you love.
Well the demographics and FARM rates of the elementary school don't match your narrative
#StatsSoHard
NP here- We are another family with 2 professional parents that live in South Arlington. We chose to send our kids to Catholic school through 8th grade but our oldest is now at Wakefield and we do not have a single complaint. Our neighborhood is also full of families with school age kids. Many of them have done the lottery or the Spanish Immersion programs for elementary school but have every intention of sending their children to Wakefield. I also know of more than 8 other families that are doing what we have done.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:To the poster that is having trouble forming a coherent thought.
What an interesting link! I live in one of the largest neighborhoods in Arlington. The median age of my neighborhood is 33.
So. Many. Houses. Have sold over the last couple of years. I'm trying to think who has been selling and who has been buying. Why, I believe it is older homeowners selling, and young families buying. Hmmm. I've lived here for 10 years, certainly I've seen this trend of young families moving once kids hit school age...
Huh. Nope. They aren't selling and moving. They are staying, even though this hood is zoned to one of the "worst" elementary schools. I guess people either tough it out, or go private for a couple of years. Doesn't seem worth the move out of a neighborhood (full of young families) that you love.
Well the demographics and FARM rates of the elementary school don't match your narrative
#StatsSoHard
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:To the poster that is having trouble forming a coherent thought.
What an interesting link! I live in one of the largest neighborhoods in Arlington. The median age of my neighborhood is 33.
So. Many. Houses. Have sold over the last couple of years. I'm trying to think who has been selling and who has been buying. Why, I believe it is older homeowners selling, and young families buying. Hmmm. I've lived here for 10 years, certainly I've seen this trend of young families moving once kids hit school age...
Huh. Nope. They aren't selling and moving. They are staying, even though this hood is zoned to one of the "worst" elementary schools. I guess people either tough it out, or go private for a couple of years. Doesn't seem worth the move out of a neighborhood (full of young families) that you love.
Well the demographics and FARM rates of the elementary school don't match your narrative
#StatsSoHard
Anonymous wrote:To the poster that is having trouble forming a coherent thought.
What an interesting link! I live in one of the largest neighborhoods in Arlington. The median age of my neighborhood is 33.
So. Many. Houses. Have sold over the last couple of years. I'm trying to think who has been selling and who has been buying. Why, I believe it is older homeowners selling, and young families buying. Hmmm. I've lived here for 10 years, certainly I've seen this trend of young families moving once kids hit school age...
Huh. Nope. They aren't selling and moving. They are staying, even though this hood is zoned to one of the "worst" elementary schools. I guess people either tough it out, or go private for a couple of years. Doesn't seem worth the move out of a neighborhood (full of young families) that you love.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Umm...there is nothing wrong with Wakefield. It's going to continue to get stronger.
Apart from a new building, there's nothing strong about that school. By virtually every metric it would be in the bottom five in NoVa.
That doesn't mean anything. It's a good school and plenty of middle class parents are choosing it for their kids. Those numbers will only continue to rise as millenials decide to settle in south Arlington. They aren't as skittish about minorities. Unlike Annadale, Lee, and Stuart, Wakefiled's demographics have held steady. We will see it trend more like W-L over the next 15 years.
I fail to see a trend of professional millenials moving down to south arlington, maybe millenials for are immigrants
What are you trying to say? Try harder and maybe your next post will make sense.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Umm...there is nothing wrong with Wakefield. It's going to continue to get stronger.
Apart from a new building, there's nothing strong about that school. By virtually every metric it would be in the bottom five in NoVa.
That doesn't mean anything. It's a good school and plenty of middle class parents are choosing it for their kids. Those numbers will only continue to rise as millenials decide to settle in south Arlington. They aren't as skittish about minorities. Unlike Annadale, Lee, and Stuart, Wakefiled's demographics have held steady. We will see it trend more like W-L over the next 15 years.
I fail to see a trend of professional millenials moving down to south arlington, maybe millenials for are immigrants
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Umm...there is nothing wrong with Wakefield. It's going to continue to get stronger.
Apart from a new building, there's nothing strong about that school. By virtually every metric it would be in the bottom five in NoVa.
That doesn't mean anything. It's a good school and plenty of middle class parents are choosing it for their kids. Those numbers will only continue to rise as millenials decide to settle in south Arlington. They aren't as skittish about minorities. Unlike Annadale, Lee, and Stuart, Wakefiled's demographics have held steady. We will see it trend more like W-L over the next 15 years.
I fail to see a trend of professional millenials moving down to south arlington, maybe millenials for are immigrants
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Umm...there is nothing wrong with Wakefield. It's going to continue to get stronger.
Apart from a new building, there's nothing strong about that school. By virtually every metric it would be in the bottom five in NoVa.
That doesn't mean anything. It's a good school and plenty of middle class parents are choosing it for their kids. Those numbers will only continue to rise as millenials decide to settle in south Arlington. They aren't as skittish about minorities. Unlike Annadale, Lee, and Stuart, Wakefiled's demographics have held steady. We will see it trend more like W-L over the next 15 years.