Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I totally agree! People are SO judgemental not just in here but even in real life. I come across this NOW when I tell collegues/friends that I am moving from safe and quiet Loudoun County to Petworth and I will put my 2 chilren in public school there. I am happy about my decision.
If you have kids you only live in petworth if you are going to do private. You are saving money on the location so private is the safest bet for your kids education.
Anonymous wrote:I totally agree! People are SO judgemental not just in here but even in real life. I come across this NOW when I tell collegues/friends that I am moving from safe and quiet Loudoun County to Petworth and I will put my 2 chilren in public school there. I am happy about my decision.
Hill East. there are some really good elementary schools,
do tell.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We lived in Adams Morgan ithout a car and now live downtown. Bought a car to get our kid to and from his charter, over an hour to get to by metro and bus but 10 minutes by car. The only saving grace is we can walk to work, stores, etc. The urban lifestyle without a car in DC isn't possible with kids.
Statements like this set me off. CLEARLY a carless lifestyle is possible but requires trade offs. I have children at three different schools spread around the city and a typical day does not involve a car to get them there. Our choice of schools heavily weighed this outcome. We passes up a clearly better school option for one that is just ok so no car transport was needed now or in the future. Not judging your choices, just pointing out that your final blanket is not, by any means, true.
Really? You really passed up a better school option because you didn't feel like getting a car? Yes, I'm judging.
Please don't come crying back to this board when your school goes to pieces. We're making choices now for our children's future.
I would never choose a second tier school because I didn't want to get a car in the city.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We lived in Adams Morgan ithout a car and now live downtown. Bought a car to get our kid to and from his charter, over an hour to get to by metro and bus but 10 minutes by car. The only saving grace is we can walk to work, stores, etc. The urban lifestyle without a car in DC isn't possible with kids.
Statements like this set me off. CLEARLY a carless lifestyle is possible but requires trade offs. I have children at three different schools spread around the city and a typical day does not involve a car to get them there. Our choice of schools heavily weighed this outcome. We passes up a clearly better school option for one that is just ok so no car transport was needed now or in the future. Not judging your choices, just pointing out that your final blanket is not, by any means, true.
Really? You really passed up a better school option because you didn't feel like getting a car? Yes, I'm judging.
Please don't come crying back to this board when your school goes to pieces. We're making choices now for our children's future.
I would never choose a second tier school because I didn't want to get a car in the city.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We lived in Adams Morgan ithout a car and now live downtown. Bought a car to get our kid to and from his charter, over an hour to get to by metro and bus but 10 minutes by car. The only saving grace is we can walk to work, stores, etc. The urban lifestyle without a car in DC isn't possible with kids.
Statements like this set me off. CLEARLY a carless lifestyle is possible but requires trade offs. I have children at three different schools spread around the city and a typical day does not involve a car to get them there. Our choice of schools heavily weighed this outcome. We passes up a clearly better school option for one that is just ok so no car transport was needed now or in the future. Not judging your choices, just pointing out that your final blanket is not, by any means, true.
Anonymous wrote:We lived in Adams Morgan ithout a car and now live downtown. Bought a car to get our kid to and from his charter, over an hour to get to by metro and bus but 10 minutes by car. The only saving grace is we can walk to work, stores, etc. The urban lifestyle without a car in DC isn't possible with kids.
Anonymous wrote:At least if your in boundary school sucks like ours.
Anonymous wrote:In my personal calculations, if I needed to buy a house in DC that required daily use of a car to get to schools, pharmacy, coffee shops, WORK , I would not continue to live in the city. The largely car free lifestyle is the key thing that offsets the public school madness for me. I also look toward the future when my teenagers will be able to walk, bike, metro to wherever they need to be.
Anonymous wrote:In my personal calculations, if I needed to buy a house in DC that required daily use of a car to get to schools, pharmacy, coffee shops, WORK , I would not continue to live in the city. The largely car free lifestyle is the key thing that offsets the public school madness for me. I also look toward the future when my teenagers will be able to walk, bike, metro to wherever they need to be.