Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:And shake your fist all you want, APS is what drives the property values in Arlington.
This is absolutely wrong. The proximity (and therefore the reduced commute times) drive property values. I also really love my neighborhood and would live here if I did not have kids (like many of my neighbors).
As a patent of 3 kids in Arlington schools, I can tell you that there is nothing magical about the schools. The teachers, like whole state of Virginia, focus almost exclusively on the subject matter on the SOLs and the classroom pace is based on the slowest kids, so my kids are bored a lot. There is terrible bureaucracy and red tape for anything that costs money, such as receiving special services for a learning disability. It is obvious that as wealthier, higher educated parents moved into Arlington and poorer families were pushed out in the last twenty years, school performance criteria (e.g., test scores) have miraculously improved as well.
It's not absolutely wrong.
The same property that costs $500,000 in Alexandria City costs $700,000 in North Arlington. Same proximity. Schools are the differentiator.
Nonsense. Real estate in Alexandria City is very expensive.
Real estate in North Arlington is MORE expensive. My point is comparable housing stock in N. Arlington costs $150,00 to $200,000 more than in Alexandria City.
Anonymous wrote:One of those options worked for me, but there are others, n'est pas? You could rent. You avoid property taxes in the short term, but your local buying dollars do serve the county. Think outside the I can't move until I buy box ...
Anonymous wrote:My Kindergartner has 21 kids and a teacher and a full-time aide in the classroom.
My 2nd grader has 20 kids in the class.
N.Arlington.
These are great ratios. I'm not going anywhere.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:And shake your fist all you want, APS is what drives the property values in Arlington.
This is absolutely wrong. The proximity (and therefore the reduced commute times) drive property values. I also really love my neighborhood and would live here if I did not have kids (like many of my neighbors).
As a patent of 3 kids in Arlington schools, I can tell you that there is nothing magical about the schools. The teachers, like whole state of Virginia, focus almost exclusively on the subject matter on the SOLs and the classroom pace is based on the slowest kids, so my kids are bored a lot. There is terrible bureaucracy and red tape for anything that costs money, such as receiving special services for a learning disability. It is obvious that as wealthier, higher educated parents moved into Arlington and poorer families were pushed out in the last twenty years, school performance criteria (e.g., test scores) have miraculously improved as well.
It's not absolutely wrong.
The same property that costs $500,000 in Alexandria City costs $700,000 in North Arlington. Same proximity. Schools are the differentiator.
Nonsense. Real estate in Alexandria City is very expensive.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I heard the school board has put off studying any new boundary adjustments. The boundaries will not change anytime soon.
In SOUTH Arlington, or potentially WRT high schools. Rezoning has already occurred for 7 schools in N Arlington and will take effect in the fall of 2015.
Wait, the middle and high school rezoning was to be decided Feb 2014. Has that been delayed or tabled?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:And shake your fist all you want, APS is what drives the property values in Arlington.
This is absolutely wrong. The proximity (and therefore the reduced commute times) drive property values. I also really love my neighborhood and would live here if I did not have kids (like many of my neighbors).
As a patent of 3 kids in Arlington schools, I can tell you that there is nothing magical about the schools. The teachers, like whole state of Virginia, focus almost exclusively on the subject matter on the SOLs and the classroom pace is based on the slowest kids, so my kids are bored a lot. There is terrible bureaucracy and red tape for anything that costs money, such as receiving special services for a learning disability. It is obvious that as wealthier, higher educated parents moved into Arlington and poorer families were pushed out in the last twenty years, school performance criteria (e.g., test scores) have miraculously improved as well.
It's not absolutely wrong.
The same property that costs $500,000 in Alexandria City costs $700,000 in North Arlington. Same proximity. Schools are the differentiator.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:And shake your fist all you want, APS is what drives the property values in Arlington.
This is absolutely wrong. The proximity (and therefore the reduced commute times) drive property values. I also really love my neighborhood and would live here if I did not have kids (like many of my neighbors).
As a patent of 3 kids in Arlington schools, I can tell you that there is nothing magical about the schools. The teachers, like whole state of Virginia, focus almost exclusively on the subject matter on the SOLs and the classroom pace is based on the slowest kids, so my kids are bored a lot. There is terrible bureaucracy and red tape for anything that costs money, such as receiving special services for a learning disability. It is obvious that as wealthier, higher educated parents moved into Arlington and poorer families were pushed out in the last twenty years, school performance criteria (e.g., test scores) have miraculously improved as well.