Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Woodson has slid in the rankings, prioritize great school ratings of 8 or higher for elementaries to avoid low ses
But GS rankings don't just focus on academic performance. Not sure what to make of Woodson slide, but we can't afford in the Madison, McLean, and Langley pyramids. We could try Oakton but not sure which elm and middleschool... Advice appreciated.
PP is a troll. There’s literally nothing wrong with Woodson. It’s a great school.
Their rating of 6/10 for 2022 says otherwise. I remember Woodson used to be an 8/10 a few years ago. Something is going downhill there but I suppose that can be said for a lot of FCPS.
I recently told my friend that Woodson was well regarded and to ignore the 6 because if you looked they are being dinged for stupid equity reasons. I don't support great schools and I also sent US news and niche rankings to her and suggested a more wholistic approach.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Woodson has slid in the rankings, prioritize great school ratings of 8 or higher for elementaries to avoid low ses
But GS rankings don't just focus on academic performance. Not sure what to make of Woodson slide, but we can't afford in the Madison, McLean, and Langley pyramids. We could try Oakton but not sure which elm and middleschool... Advice appreciated.
PP is a troll. There’s literally nothing wrong with Woodson. It’s a great school.
Their rating of 6/10 for 2022 says otherwise. I remember Woodson used to be an 8/10 a few years ago. Something is going downhill there but I suppose that can be said for a lot of FCPS.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Mantua, but it's an AAP center so you have to deal with that BS.
What does this mean? What BS?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I dont think any of the 3 schools you're considering will be a glide path to AAP.
Given the new local norm standards in which kids compete against their immediate peers, if an easy AAP path is what you're looking for in the Woodson pyramid would consider Little Run or Olde Creek instead.
For reference, DC had a 137 COGAT and didn't make the top 10% automatic consideration for AAP in one of the schools you're eying. Did ultimately get in first round though so doesn't necessarily matter.
Wow, that's interesting. Definitely not looking for easy path but wanted to consider whether it may be significantly more difficult to get in at one of these schools versus the others. Just like to have a lot of information.
Anonymous wrote:Wakefield is less diverse than CW, or at least feels that way if you’re in AAP.
I like that the center teachers can plan together. It makes for stronger lessons.
Olde Creek is a great community. But like Little Run, it is tiny and by the end of elementary school, the kids are over it. But - if your AAP kid goes to a non-center school, even if it’s large, you are in this boat, with the same kids in the AAP class each year. I wouldn’t send my AAP kid to the base school for that reason.
Olde Creek’s GS ratings need to be taken with a grain of salt. They have a center for special education students with fairly high needs, which surely impacts test scores. Compare that to CW, for example, where they have a center for deaf and hard of hearing, which wouldn’t have much if any impact on assessments, as well as an AAP center.
CW is not as open of a community IMO, and while I’ve heard the Mantua parents are worse, some of the CW AAP parents are also very intense.
CW may give homework but it’s really minimal. My child generally does it at school, and I’m sure there are minimal consequences if they didn’t do it at all (not that you want to model that for your kid, but it isn’t critical to the rest of their day). I would definitely not choose between that and another school based on homework.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would pick Wakefield. You didn’t ask about other schools but I would avoid olde creek and little run.
I've heard this too.
Why? Asking as an Olde Creek parent, we have had a wonderful experience there. Avoid the school for what reason?
Anonymous wrote:There are some extremely wealthy families at Mantua (which could be a good or bad thing depending on your perspective). Their PTA budget is kind of insane.
For example, the drama club puts on two incredibly sophisticated musicals every year. Maybe other schools do this too? Not sure, but it certainly doesn’t happen at our base school.
Anonymous wrote:One data driven difference between your original 3 schools is that CWES and Mantua both have roughly twice as many economically challenged kids (around 14% compared to 7% at WFES).
Also as another poster noted, more ESOL kids at both those schools. In both cases this is probably due to them serving as AAP centers so kids are coming from lots of different places, including Title I schools. Not that it should play any role in your decision, but that is data, rather than opinion.
Houses may cost a tad more in Mantua, but I can speak for the other two neighborhoods, both of which have lots of highly-educated folks (most are senior level feds, lawyers, journalists, business owners, consultants, diplomats, etc). Not always folks in super high paying jobs, but they do very interesting and respected work.