Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Certain schools in montgomery county are great, but not all. So it depends where your kids would be going. If you can afford private schooling, then you might want to do it.
Translation: Schools with lots of affluent, white, and Asian parents have a good reputation. Schools with lots of poor, African-American, and Hispanic parents have a bad reputation.
Very accurate translation. Good job.
Anonymous wrote:say you live in Montgomery County, which has an excellent public school system
Montgomery County does not have an excellent school system. Its mediocre at best but getting worse each year. In the past few years it has gone down hill fast. Class sizes exploded a few years ago and 2.0 is the biggest disaster. The new Algebra 2.0 was such a disaster that MCPS inflated all test scores to bring everyone up to last year's failure rate. 32% of middle school kids and 82% of high school kids failed before the grade inflation. Several ES schools in Churchill and Wootton are seeing enrollment declines for the first time in years. It isn't because houses are not being sold to people with kids.
Montgomery County is becoming what NW DC used to be..a residential community with good houses but if you can afford it, you do private.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Certain schools in montgomery county are great, but not all. So it depends where your kids would be going. If you can afford private schooling, then you might want to do it.
Translation: Schools with lots of affluent, white, and Asian parents have a good reputation. Schools with lots of poor, African-American, and Hispanic parents have a bad reputation.
Anonymous wrote:We live in the Whitman cluster in MoCo. I wanted an IB (International Baccalaureate) school with an immersion program and didn't want to be at the mercy of a lottery system where several hundred families are wait-listed each year for 50 spots in the Spanish immersion school.
We're at WIS and have never looked back.
However, most of my neighbors send their kids to our neighborhood schools and are very happy with their choices. All the Whitman grads we know turned out to be great kids who attend great colleges.
Anonymous wrote:Class sizes.
Cohorts.
MCPS isn't that great anymore.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here,
well, there is always hope...hope they will get in at Stoddert. I know someone whose kid got in by lottery to an out of boundery charter school, at age 3.
yes, there are definitely spots available out of boundary for PS and PK at many DC public schools and charter schools. Just not at the ones that you mentioned in your post above.
Anonymous wrote:I teach in MCPS and my DC attends private. I wanted a religious education and to avoid most of the social dysfunction I see first hand in public schools. We're AA.
Anonymous wrote:OP here,
well, there is always hope...hope they will get in at Stoddert. I know someone whose kid got in by lottery to an out of boundery charter school, at age 3.