Anonymous wrote:Where do you work, OP? If the kids stay in the current schools, what is your plan for getting them there? This info may help come up with ideas/alternatives.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:That is such a tough commute for everyone, OP. I think you're right to look for alternatives. But I also think you did a great job finding good schools for your kids with the information you had at the time.
- I think it's going to be harder to find a "good" HS alternative than it is to find a "good" elementary school alternative
- That said, you want to do your best to get your younger child into a "good" middle school pathway too
- I think ideally you'd want to find a high school that is reasonable for your older child to commute to on their own and an elementary school that is reasonable for you to commute with your younger child to.
- I think the next best option is to find two schools in close enough proximity that you can reasonably commute with them both.
Some ideas:
- Eastern, KIPP Legacy, Friendship, Thurgood for your older child to commute to themselves. All have short wait lists and a decent cohort of students passing standardized tests. Definitely ask around the neighborhood for recommendations
- Sojourner Truth is in close proximity to Stokes Brookland and is fairly well regarded
- Thomson is well-liked by families there, short waitlist, feeds into one of the better middle schools, and is sort-of on the way to MacArthur
I think that High School is more important socially and that keeping the Sophomore in the same school is a major factor. And the Sophomore really can commute on their own, so that shouldn't be as big of a factor. This, of course, depends on the kid and their relationships. If they don't make friends and hate the school, by all means find an alternative. But if they like MacArthur, I see no reason to move them.
Getting the younger child into a good middle school is, indeed, pretty important. I wonder if getting into one of the hill middles at 5th grade might be a good call to assure a decent middle school track? I live fairly far from there, so it's not my thing, but my kid is entering 5th this year, so I know there's a big shuffle at that grade.
The commute between MacArthur and Hillcrest via transit is probably a solid hour and a half. Personally I would have hated having to rely on my parents to get to/from school in high school, but it's the only reasonable choice if they go to MacArthur. Commute/lack of autonomy would be my main motivation to pick a different high school.
All things considered, if I were in this situation I'd probably opt for MacArthur and Thomson and try the 5th grade lottery for a Hardy/MacArthur feeder and/or BASIS. If that didn't pan out, Thomson/John Francis is still a decent pathway.
Yep. from Hillcrest I think you would have to do a bus to green line, green line to red line, exit Dupont, bus to MacArthur.
People like to claim this stuff “just works out” but in reality, not really. If you have a better commute to MacArthur let us know.
I think it’s 2 buses at this point but I am looking into some sort of shuttle service. I agree stuff doesn’t just work out but I’ll make sure it does. Asking here was one effort, people are so lame and not helpful though
Anonymous wrote:Waitlists are moving now and not always predictable. For the 4th grader, go in and add anything that might work for this year. You can always turn down the waitlist spot if offered. McArthur for high school is doable if you do a combination where you sometimes drive your daughter and she sometimes takes public transit. She will not be the only one. But you wont be in a position to sometimes drive her and make it work unless you find something better for the 4th grader, either because the school is closer to McArthur or closer to home. I wouldn’t based on where you now live worry too much about losing the middle school feed to DCI for the younger kid.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:People think Mccarthur is a good school bc its adjacent to several wealthy neighborhoods. It's a title 1 school - few or none of the parents who live in those neighborhoods would ever send their kids to the school as it is currently constituted. Im talking about the parents who own $2+ million sfh in those adjacent neighborhoods - not parents renting apartments around the corner or across the street from the school.
OP here… I don’t “think” anything about McA. Since my daughter is a rising 10th grader, schools like Banneker and Walls weren’t an option. This is what we got in the lottery, I could at this point consider switching to eastern… we were waitlisted for private and didn’t get low numbers for any of our charter preferences.
To agree with another poster here, "DCUM is a strange place" - and that is very true. While helpful for some questions, it is a very narrow subset of parents. I think your best bet is to talk to other parents in your neighborhood, and then weigh what is best for your family. Many families/kids do make long commutes across town and it works for them, but there is definitely a cost to that.
My vote would be reach out to Eastern - ask about their EPIC program (https://www.easternhighschooldcps.org/ourpages/auto/2020/7/28/55213143/EPIC%20Info%2024-25.pdf?rnd=1704732509155) - since you just moved, there is probably some flexibility with deadlines. You already are have a spot at McA so don't give that up yet, but go visit Eastern this month and see what you think. (and while you are at it, come back here and update the thread, b/c Eastern comes up as a point of discussion sometimes). If you go into the threads about Eastern (or Google it) - the overall test scores aren't great, but as has been discussed, that is an average that takes into account the whole school, including issues of chronic absenteeism, etc. The IB program and some of the other specialized programs have been reviewed positively by parents and there are a lot of opportunities for internships etc. (https://www.easternhighschooldcps.org/apps/pages/index.jsp?uREC_ID=456827&type=d)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:That is such a tough commute for everyone, OP. I think you're right to look for alternatives. But I also think you did a great job finding good schools for your kids with the information you had at the time.
- I think it's going to be harder to find a "good" HS alternative than it is to find a "good" elementary school alternative
- That said, you want to do your best to get your younger child into a "good" middle school pathway too
- I think ideally you'd want to find a high school that is reasonable for your older child to commute to on their own and an elementary school that is reasonable for you to commute with your younger child to.
- I think the next best option is to find two schools in close enough proximity that you can reasonably commute with them both.
Some ideas:
- Eastern, KIPP Legacy, Friendship, Thurgood for your older child to commute to themselves. All have short wait lists and a decent cohort of students passing standardized tests. Definitely ask around the neighborhood for recommendations
- Sojourner Truth is in close proximity to Stokes Brookland and is fairly well regarded
- Thomson is well-liked by families there, short waitlist, feeds into one of the better middle schools, and is sort-of on the way to MacArthur
I think that High School is more important socially and that keeping the Sophomore in the same school is a major factor. And the Sophomore really can commute on their own, so that shouldn't be as big of a factor. This, of course, depends on the kid and their relationships. If they don't make friends and hate the school, by all means find an alternative. But if they like MacArthur, I see no reason to move them.
Getting the younger child into a good middle school is, indeed, pretty important. I wonder if getting into one of the hill middles at 5th grade might be a good call to assure a decent middle school track? I live fairly far from there, so it's not my thing, but my kid is entering 5th this year, so I know there's a big shuffle at that grade.
The commute between MacArthur and Hillcrest via transit is probably a solid hour and a half. Personally I would have hated having to rely on my parents to get to/from school in high school, but it's the only reasonable choice if they go to MacArthur. Commute/lack of autonomy would be my main motivation to pick a different high school.
All things considered, if I were in this situation I'd probably opt for MacArthur and Thomson and try the 5th grade lottery for a Hardy/MacArthur feeder and/or BASIS. If that didn't pan out, Thomson/John Francis is still a decent pathway.
Yep. from Hillcrest I think you would have to do a bus to green line, green line to red line, exit Dupont, bus to MacArthur.
People like to claim this stuff “just works out” but in reality, not really. If you have a better commute to MacArthur let us know.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I just saw a post on the MacArthur thread that a student commutes from Anacostia, so I hope your daughter makes friends who also live by you all. It will make the commute better for her!
Let's not mistake that Hillcrest is a beautiful neighborhood!
DCUM is a strange place OP.
OP here! Thank you for this! It really is so strange… as a first time resident of DC and while I am familiar with many schools in dc becuase of friends or work affiliates I certainly wasn’t as prepared when I entered the lottery 8 months ago.
If you had posted for advice to DCUM 8 months ago, we would have helped you figure out something better. Now you’re in a literally impossible situation. The only solution is to switch your DD to Eastern and let her get there on her own and keep other DD in Stokes; or hope your younger DD gets into Stokes East End and you have the time to do both drop offs and work.
Anonymous wrote:I don’t know what you are asking us OP. That seems like a literally impossible commute under many circumstances. What exactly are you asking for? The best public transportation routes for your older DD? A closer school for your younger one? If you leave your DD in Stokes then your older DD pretty much has to get herself to school. I’m not sure why you didn’t find an apartment zoned for JR or in Arlington.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:That is such a tough commute for everyone, OP. I think you're right to look for alternatives. But I also think you did a great job finding good schools for your kids with the information you had at the time.
- I think it's going to be harder to find a "good" HS alternative than it is to find a "good" elementary school alternative
- That said, you want to do your best to get your younger child into a "good" middle school pathway too
- I think ideally you'd want to find a high school that is reasonable for your older child to commute to on their own and an elementary school that is reasonable for you to commute with your younger child to.
- I think the next best option is to find two schools in close enough proximity that you can reasonably commute with them both.
Some ideas:
- Eastern, KIPP Legacy, Friendship, Thurgood for your older child to commute to themselves. All have short wait lists and a decent cohort of students passing standardized tests. Definitely ask around the neighborhood for recommendations
- Sojourner Truth is in close proximity to Stokes Brookland and is fairly well regarded
- Thomson is well-liked by families there, short waitlist, feeds into one of the better middle schools, and is sort-of on the way to MacArthur
I think that High School is more important socially and that keeping the Sophomore in the same school is a major factor. And the Sophomore really can commute on their own, so that shouldn't be as big of a factor. This, of course, depends on the kid and their relationships. If they don't make friends and hate the school, by all means find an alternative. But if they like MacArthur, I see no reason to move them.
Getting the younger child into a good middle school is, indeed, pretty important. I wonder if getting into one of the hill middles at 5th grade might be a good call to assure a decent middle school track? I live fairly far from there, so it's not my thing, but my kid is entering 5th this year, so I know there's a big shuffle at that grade.
The commute between MacArthur and Hillcrest via transit is probably a solid hour and a half. Personally I would have hated having to rely on my parents to get to/from school in high school, but it's the only reasonable choice if they go to MacArthur. Commute/lack of autonomy would be my main motivation to pick a different high school.
All things considered, if I were in this situation I'd probably opt for MacArthur and Thomson and try the 5th grade lottery for a Hardy/MacArthur feeder and/or BASIS. If that didn't pan out, Thomson/John Francis is still a decent pathway.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I just saw a post on the MacArthur thread that a student commutes from Anacostia, so I hope your daughter makes friends who also live by you all. It will make the commute better for her!
Let's not mistake that Hillcrest is a beautiful neighborhood!
DCUM is a strange place OP.
OP here! Thank you for this! It really is so strange… as a first time resident of DC and while I am familiar with many schools in dc becuase of friends or work affiliates I certainly wasn’t as prepared when I entered the lottery 8 months ago.