Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I agree that there are tons of parks and schools in Shaw/Bloomingdale! And large backyards on many row homes to boot. It's extremely family friendly at this point. People will stay if they can make it work. Garrison/Langley/Seaton/Cleveland have a huge opportunity right now if they are interested. Aftercare for all is critical (yay Langley!), and a full 8-week summer camp at the school would be a huge draw too.
How about a pony too? Or at least a chicken for the backyard?
Springboard offers summer care at various school,ls, as does DCPS. It is a good idea, not at all farfetched.
DCPS summer school is 4 weeks, and the younger grades are run by Springboard. It isn't at every location and the seats are first come, first served.
Does Springboard offer Spanish in the summer? I really wish we could have summer options at Harry Thomas rec center...
Anonymous wrote:PP here on the summer camps. Yes, I'd like to see ponies and chickens too. In other words, a race to the top would be great. I'm not saying it'll happen overnight or that the schools don't have more important issues. But I think it's not asking too much to focus long-term on more than one thing.
And I know the garden teacher was looking into chickens.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I agree that there are tons of parks and schools in Shaw/Bloomingdale! And large backyards on many row homes to boot. It's extremely family friendly at this point. People will stay if they can make it work. Garrison/Langley/Seaton/Cleveland have a huge opportunity right now if they are interested. Aftercare for all is critical (yay Langley!), and a full 8-week summer camp at the school would be a huge draw too.
How about a pony too? Or at least a chicken for the backyard?
Springboard offers summer care at various school,ls, as does DCPS. It is a good idea, not at all farfetched.
DCPS summer school is 4 weeks, and the younger grades are run by Springboard. It isn't at every location and the seats are first come, first served.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I agree that there are tons of parks and schools in Shaw/Bloomingdale! And large backyards on many row homes to boot. It's extremely family friendly at this point. People will stay if they can make it work. Garrison/Langley/Seaton/Cleveland have a huge opportunity right now if they are interested. Aftercare for all is critical (yay Langley!), and a full 8-week summer camp at the school would be a huge draw too.
How about a pony too? Or at least a chicken for the backyard?
Springboard offers summer care at various school,ls, as does DCPS. It is a good idea, not at all farfetched.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I agree that there are tons of parks and schools in Shaw/Bloomingdale! And large backyards on many row homes to boot. It's extremely family friendly at this point. People will stay if they can make it work. Garrison/Langley/Seaton/Cleveland have a huge opportunity right now if they are interested. Aftercare for all is critical (yay Langley!), and a full 8-week summer camp at the school would be a huge draw too.
How about a pony too? Or at least a chicken for the backyard?
Springboard offers summer care at various school,ls, as does DCPS. It is a good idea, not at all farfetched.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I agree that there are tons of parks and schools in Shaw/Bloomingdale! And large backyards on many row homes to boot. It's extremely family friendly at this point. People will stay if they can make it work. Garrison/Langley/Seaton/Cleveland have a huge opportunity right now if they are interested. Aftercare for all is critical (yay Langley!), and a full 8-week summer camp at the school would be a huge draw too.
How about a pony too? Or at least a chicken for the backyard?
Anonymous wrote:I agree that there are tons of parks and schools in Shaw/Bloomingdale! And large backyards on many row homes to boot. It's extremely family friendly at this point. People will stay if they can make it work. Garrison/Langley/Seaton/Cleveland have a huge opportunity right now if they are interested. Aftercare for all is critical (yay Langley!), and a full 8-week summer camp at the school would be a huge draw too.
Anonymous wrote:It's true that it was too quick. Neighborhoods like Brookland are gentrifying, but they're gentrifying with families into houses and neighborhoods. The same can be said of parts of the Hill moving north and east. The part of Shaw/Bloomingdale/LeDroit that has gentrified has done so in way that's very urban - there are no schools and parks, but lots of restaurants and bars and access to metro. It's not a part of the city that lends itself to families settling in and building schools.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, we live in Bloomingdale and toured both schools. We know people in each PK3 classroom at Langley who endorsed their teacher, and do not know people at Garrison, so that was one reason. Ultimately we decided that while Garrison may be slighly different in various ways, it was not significantly better in any way that justified the commute. It would have been great to be at Langley with several friends and share pickup and half day duties. Also it's much easier to be an involved parent if the school is close by. Ultimately we matched elsewhere, so my research was for naught. Hope it helps you.
Thank you - very helpful. May I ask if you matched at another DCPS or HRC? If DCPS is there a specific reason you chose it over your neighborhood school?
Thank you.
We matched at Mundo, so... Really, other than Seaton, no neighborhood school that we could get into OOB, was worth the logistical problems it would have created.
I would have happily enrolled in Langley or Seaton (Seaton being so close to the G8 and Shaw metro), and I am 100% certain that Langley, Seaton, Garrison, and Cleveland have the potential to be much better than they are today, and to be true neighborhood schools that most people are happy to attend. It is an uphill battle and DCPS itself is both friend and foe, but it is obvious to me after living here for a while that progress is happening. If Bloomingdale/Eckington came together and demanded better for its school like other neighborhoods do every year, it would work.
Bloomingdale gentrified so quickly, there's no neighborhood force for the schools (No, the Bloomingdale Kids listserv doesn't count. Just ask the Moms on the Hill). It's the new Dupont Circle: singles, couples (gay or straight, but without children), and legacy families without children competing for schools. Who buys a 1500 sq. ft. newly renovated condo in Bloomingdale for $700K expecting to raise a family in that space and invest in the schools? Pre-school? Okay, but long-term? Not a chance.
Is 20 plus years "so quick"?