Anonymous wrote:I happen to know that the PTA and parents really take care of the teachers too! My friend used to teach there and her "Teacher Appreciation Gifts" were things like a gift certificate to Rose's Luxury and tickets to the Kennedy Center. She got gift cards to Lululemon, Nordstrom, Kendra Scott, etc for holidays. Georgetown Cupcakes on her birthday. I was so envious!! At my school, I get a little potted plant and a starbucks card for Teacher Appreciation.
So they know how to retain their teachers too!
Anonymous wrote:Do any Jamestown planning units go to W&L, or are they all Yorktown?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is Jamestown the elementary where the PTA has an operating budget and a separate budget for capital projects?
There money market account has more $ than some South Arlington PTAs combined!!
http://jamestownpta.org/financial-information/
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Jamestown has been the Arlington public elementary school of choice for the rich for decades. That won't be changing any time soon. Its test score are off the charts because its population is very wealthy and very privileged. It is severely lacking in diversity and has a reputation for being super snooty. Any North Arlington public elementary school provides an equally solid education without all of that.
And there are also south Arlington schools that offer "an equally solid education without all of that" and with diversity that is absent from most (almost all) north Arlington elementary schools.
Diversity isn't inherently a virtue.
And some South Arlington schools aren't very diverse at all. They're majority Hispanic, for example.
The irony is Yorktown HS's demographics most closely match those of Arlington County.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Jamestown is essentially a private school for parents who can’t quite afford the real thing. The school auction takes place at Washington Golf every year and the parents try to outdo each other with gross displays of money. The dads tend to be 10-15 years older than the wives, and the wives are vapid and catty. We moved to get away from that scene.
Trust me, they can afford the real thing. What keeps them there is the excellent academics and teachers. Most of the families/kids I know that go there love it.
Oh. My. God.
Jamestown is a public school like any other. And trust me, most of them can’t afford 40K per kid for 13 years, and if they could without cutting back, they would in a heartbeat.
No, it isn't and hasn't been for a long time. It's the one school in Arlington where I do think that many of the families could pretty easily go private if they wanted. I personally know several families there whose parents make millions of dollars a year. You really don't see that anywhere else in Arlington public elementary schools. It's why we didn't send our kids there. Honestly.
I don’t doubt that you know several families there who make in the seven figures, and that is quite unique for public school. But what you fail to grasp is how unbelievably common that is at the 40K privates! Honestly our HHI is that high (well into 7 figures) and we feel average / comfortable at our kids 40K private,
(not a big 3!) compared to all those with significant family money or 8 figure incomes.
My point is I think it’s embarrassing to act like a public school is “essentially a private school”. No. No, it is not. Ridiculous!
How do I put this? I'm wealthy. Most of the families I know put their kids in private. And, yes, the ones I know are wealthy. But they're no wealthier than the Jamestown parents who I also know.
And Jamestown is probably a better school than a non-Big 3 private anyway.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Jamestown has been the Arlington public elementary school of choice for the rich for decades. That won't be changing any time soon. Its test score are off the charts because its population is very wealthy and very privileged. It is severely lacking in diversity and has a reputation for being super snooty. Any North Arlington public elementary school provides an equally solid education without all of that.
And there are also south Arlington schools that offer "an equally solid education without all of that" and with diversity that is absent from most (almost all) north Arlington elementary schools.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is Jamestown the elementary where the PTA has an operating budget and a separate budget for capital projects?
There money market account has more $ than some South Arlington PTAs combined!!
http://jamestownpta.org/financial-information/
Anonymous wrote:Is Jamestown the elementary where the PTA has an operating budget and a separate budget for capital projects?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:South Arlington Parent, so I’ll bite.
What are the “big 3” private schools ?
+1. I was wondering the same thing.
Sidwell, National Cathedral School, and St. Albans
Obviously the “big 3” are all in DC. In VA the “top” but not “big 3” schools often mentioned most are Potomac (McLean) and St Stephens/St Agnes (Alexandria) but there are others as well.
The “big 3” are fairly exclusive but they mostly have cachet because they’ve attracted various political families over the years. No doubt they are great but there are plenty of other top tier private schools in the DC area.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:South Arlington Parent, so I’ll bite.
What are the “big 3” private schools ?
+1. I was wondering the same thing.
Anonymous wrote:South Arlington Parent, so I’ll bite.
What are the “big 3” private schools ?