Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The Hill schools gentrified because the in-boundary families were (to overstate it) white and rich and the school had previously had a lot of out-of-boundary students.
Unless your in-boundary homes and families are like that, you won't get a flip like that.
And you don't need to see the FARMS data to know its' happening.
You may not need FARMS data, but it helps to have demographic data.
Why?
Because we don't want to be the only Asian family at the school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The Hill schools gentrified because the in-boundary families were (to overstate it) white and rich and the school had previously had a lot of out-of-boundary students.
Unless your in-boundary homes and families are like that, you won't get a flip like that.
And you don't need to see the FARMS data to know its' happening.
You may not need FARMS data, but it helps to have demographic data.
Why?
Because we don't want to be the only Asian family at the school.
You live in DC.
23:27 is a troll fail. Everyone know no real Asian would send their kids into a DC school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The Hill schools gentrified because the in-boundary families were (to overstate it) white and rich and the school had previously had a lot of out-of-boundary students.
Unless your in-boundary homes and families are like that, you won't get a flip like that.
And you don't need to see the FARMS data to know its' happening.
You may not need FARMS data, but it helps to have demographic data.
Why?
Because we don't want to be the only Asian family at the school.
You live in DC.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The Hill schools gentrified because the in-boundary families were (to overstate it) white and rich and the school had previously had a lot of out-of-boundary students.
Unless your in-boundary homes and families are like that, you won't get a flip like that.
And you don't need to see the FARMS data to know its' happening.
You may not need FARMS data, but it helps to have demographic data.
Why?
Because we don't want to be the only Asian family at the school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The Hill schools gentrified because the in-boundary families were (to overstate it) white and rich and the school had previously had a lot of out-of-boundary students.
Unless your in-boundary homes and families are like that, you won't get a flip like that.
And you don't need to see the FARMS data to know its' happening.
You may not need FARMS data, but it helps to have demographic data.
Why?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The Hill schools gentrified because the in-boundary families were (to overstate it) white and rich and the school had previously had a lot of out-of-boundary students.
Unless your in-boundary homes and families are like that, you won't get a flip like that.
People who are rich don't live in the hill
That's a naive comment about rich people not living on the Hill. A house on my block just got listed for $1.9 million -- inbound for the Cluster. Plenty of expensive real estate outside Brent/Maury school-zones.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The Hill schools gentrified because the in-boundary families were (to overstate it) white and rich and the school had previously had a lot of out-of-boundary students.
Unless your in-boundary homes and families are like that, you won't get a flip like that.
People who are rich don't live in the hill
Anonymous wrote:Top 5% of all Americans. Not just DC.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The Hill schools gentrified because the in-boundary families were (to overstate it) white and rich and the school had previously had a lot of out-of-boundary students.
Unless your in-boundary homes and families are like that, you won't get a flip like that.
People who are rich don't live in the hill
Any person who makes over $118,500 in gross wages a year is in the top 5% of wage earners in this country. They are well off by any measure if they are purchasing a home on the Hill.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The Hill schools gentrified because the in-boundary families were (to overstate it) white and rich and the school had previously had a lot of out-of-boundary students.
Unless your in-boundary homes and families are like that, you won't get a flip like that.
And you don't need to see the FARMS data to know its' happening.
You do need the FARMS data to know if the in bounds families are sending their kids to the schools. There are ungentrified or partially gentrified "Hill" schools (JO Wilson, Watkins, Tyler, Payne, Miner) where this same phenomenon applies, but the Brent/Maury effect hasn't totally taken off yet. For instance, my understanding is that 15-18 upper middle class SES families all sent their PK3ers to Miner this year; that could have an enormous affect on the school.
The key is whether those families stay past PK. Free PK is great, but it will they stick around for K and beyond?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The Hill schools gentrified because the in-boundary families were (to overstate it) white and rich and the school had previously had a lot of out-of-boundary students.
Unless your in-boundary homes and families are like that, you won't get a flip like that.
People who are rich don't live in the hill
Any person who makes over $118,500 in gross wages a year is in the top 5% of wage earners in this country. They are well off by any measure if they are purchasing a home on the Hill.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The Hill schools gentrified because the in-boundary families were (to overstate it) white and rich and the school had previously had a lot of out-of-boundary students.
Unless your in-boundary homes and families are like that, you won't get a flip like that.
And you don't need to see the FARMS data to know its' happening.
You may not need FARMS data, but it helps to have demographic data.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The Hill schools gentrified because the in-boundary families were (to overstate it) white and rich and the school had previously had a lot of out-of-boundary students.
Unless your in-boundary homes and families are like that, you won't get a flip like that.
People who are rich don't live in the hill
Anonymous wrote:The Hill schools gentrified because the in-boundary families were (to overstate it) white and rich and the school had previously had a lot of out-of-boundary students.
Unless your in-boundary homes and families are like that, you won't get a flip like that.