Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, I live in PG and absolutely love it (NT kid is in a public magnet), but have to advise against it if your child has an IEP and and autism diagnosis.
I do have a couple of dear friends in Howard County who have great things to say about the schools there.
Grew up in PG and would absolutely not recommend it. Terrible schools for one. Secondly, it's not very diverse unless you consider mostly AA with a sprinkling of low income whites and a small filipino enclave as diverse.
Anonymous wrote:OP, I live in PG and absolutely love it (NT kid is in a public magnet), but have to advise against it if your child has an IEP and and autism diagnosis.
I do have a couple of dear friends in Howard County who have great things to say about the schools there.
Anonymous wrote:We're an AA family and live in McLean. It's not terribly diverse in terms of AAs, but there are a lot of international folks, Asians, some LGBT (at least in our neighborhood). Schools are fantastic (FFX Co has some of the best in the country), and the commute to Bethesda is pretty easy. Not walkable though, which I don't like. The budget may not fit unless you're willing to look at townhouses?
If you live in DC proper you may be able to get the city to pay for your son to go to a specialized school for kids with LDs like Lab. I know this used to be the case as DC did not have any facilities equipped to deal with these kids and they lost a lawsuit and had to pay to send these kids to private schools were they could be accommodated.
This is terrible advice. Yes - it's possible to get a private placement, but only AFTER the school system has failed your child for two years or so, and then you have to hire a lawyer and get serious. Why waste a few years of your kids educational life like that? It's terrible
Anonymous wrote:If you live in DC proper you may be able to get the city to pay for your son to go to a specialized school for kids with LDs like Lab. I know this used to be the case as DC did not have any facilities equipped to deal with these kids and they lost a lawsuit and had to pay to send these kids to private schools were they could be accommodated.