Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Any neighborhood along the orange line that you like will have good schools. If your DH's office is near the VRE station in DC (Union Station?) than you have even more options.
Best schools along Orange Line are in East Falls Church (Yorktown), West Falls Church (McLean and Marshall) or Vienna (Madison).
Since when in Yorktown in EFC?
Yorktown is not physically in EFC, but the EFC area feeds to Yorktown. Generally people are more concerned with what schools their kids will GO to rather than what schools are technically in their neighborhood.
EFC refers to Metro stop. Much of the immediate area is in Arlington County and not Falls Church City.
Anonymous wrote:Yet, again, I feel we have come down to the haves and have-nots. You can claim to be colorblind all you want, but for the most part, "high test scores" comes down to "rich/privileged"
You can buy your way into the neighborhoods with little to no poverty - good for you...or something. Your kids will be surrounded by others as well-off as you. And the idea of meritocracy withers.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
You seem to be assigning virtue to diversity. Why? Is there something wrong with an all-white public elementary school? Not understanding you.
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I really cannot wrap my brain around THIS statement. You do understand we live in the twenty-first century, right?
Try to explain. You're not making any sense. You seem to suggest that a diverse school is preferable or superior to a homogenous one... So, defend that.
In my experience, diversity rarely ends well and the kids self-segregate by HS anyway. And, generally, speaking, people keep this self segregation going into adulthood.
Appalling to read something like this in this day and age. In an area that is well on its way to majority minority (as is the country as a whole), I personally find such uber-homogeneity problematic for equipping kids to cope in a diverse society. We happen to live in such a district in Arlington but DC goes to one of the countywide schools. No, diversity doesn't solve everything and doesn't make a school superior on its own but kids do learn to see the world differently and navigate it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
You seem to be assigning virtue to diversity. Why? Is there something wrong with an all-white public elementary school? Not understanding you.
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I really cannot wrap my brain around THIS statement. You do understand we live in the twenty-first century, right?
Try to explain. You're not making any sense. You seem to suggest that a diverse school is preferable or superior to a homogenous one... So, defend that.
In my experience, diversity rarely ends well and the kids self-segregate by HS anyway. And, generally, speaking, people keep this self segregation going into adulthood.
Anonymous wrote:Reston? Being poor sucks.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
You seem to be assigning virtue to diversity. Why? Is there something wrong with an all-white public elementary school? Not understanding you.
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I really cannot wrap my brain around THIS statement. You do understand we live in the twenty-first century, right?
Anonymous wrote:
You seem to be assigning virtue to diversity. Why? Is there something wrong with an all-white public elementary school? Not understanding you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Any neighborhood along the orange line that you like will have good schools. If your DH's office is near the VRE station in DC (Union Station?) than you have even more options.
Best schools along Orange Line are in East Falls Church (Yorktown), West Falls Church (McLean and Marshall) or Vienna (Madison).
Since when in Yorktown in EFC?
Yorktown is not physically in EFC, but the EFC area feeds to Yorktown. Generally people are more concerned with what schools their kids will GO to rather than what schools are technically in their neighborhood.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:fyi, the best elementary schools in Northern Virginia tend to be much more diverse than the all white public elementary schools in Upper NW DC. For example, Arlington Science Focus, one of the highest performing schools in Northern Va, is close to 40 percent minority, and has 20% free/red lunch. Some of the schools in nearby Mclean and Falls Church are nearly 30% Asian.
If you're looking for close-in schools that closely mirror the demographics of those in upper NW, then Jamestown or Taylor in Arlington are the most similar. If you're open to some ethnic and socio-economic diversity, there are many more options.
You seem to be assigning virtue to diversity. Why? Is there something wrong with an all-white public elementary school? Not understanding you.
Anonymous wrote:fyi, the best elementary schools in Northern Virginia tend to be much more diverse than the all white public elementary schools in Upper NW DC. For example, Arlington Science Focus, one of the highest performing schools in Northern Va, is close to 40 percent minority, and has 20% free/red lunch. Some of the schools in nearby Mclean and Falls Church are nearly 30% Asian.
If you're looking for close-in schools that closely mirror the demographics of those in upper NW, then Jamestown or Taylor in Arlington are the most similar. If you're open to some ethnic and socio-economic diversity, there are many more options.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Any neighborhood along the orange line that you like will have good schools. If your DH's office is near the VRE station in DC (Union Station?) than you have even more options.
Best schools along Orange Line are in East Falls Church (Yorktown), West Falls Church (McLean and Marshall) or Vienna (Madison).
Since when in Yorktown in EFC?