Anonymous wrote:Op here. Yes - we only care about PK3 and 4. We intend to be in DC only 3 or so years. Language immersion in not important. Since we do have the flexibility to buy almost anywhere in DC, we would love to be strategic about it with regards to schools.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Cap Hill in the Cluster boundary. Peabody is great and it's bigger than many other ECE programs - still not a given. You also have SWS, CH Montessori and charters as a citywide backups. Nothing guaranteed. Brent is great but tough for PK3 without siblings if you're IB.
^^ and in 3 ... 2 ... 1 ... someone will chine in to disparage Hill middle schools![]()
Er, no. OP said they would not be here that long, so it's irrelevant.
that never stops DCUM crowd from trolling CH middle schools
Hmmm...
Something tells me it's not the collective DCUM trolling CH middle schools. Something tells me it's people who are actually familiar with CH middle schools...
Swami says: "Bingo!"
no -- it's usually people who moved to the suburbs a decade ago and never got woke
Oh. Another case of an old lady on DCUM thinking that the deliberate use of poor grammar makes her "cool"....
you're an idiot
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'd look in Old City/H Street/NoMa in NE DC. Amazing family community, lots of young families, extremely walkable, Whole Foods, soon to be Trader Joe's, Union Market, etc. no one has mentioned JO Wilson, but it's a great elementary school option as well. Location is perfect to commute via train, bike, car, etc. if you plan to rent, you'll easily cover your mortgage.
And the middle school?
Anonymous wrote:I'd look in Old City/H Street/NoMa in NE DC. Amazing family community, lots of young families, extremely walkable, Whole Foods, soon to be Trader Joe's, Union Market, etc. no one has mentioned JO Wilson, but it's a great elementary school option as well. Location is perfect to commute via train, bike, car, etc. if you plan to rent, you'll easily cover your mortgage.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:First time posters here so please be gentle.
We are looking to buy in DC from out of state. DS is 6 months old. What neigborhood will give us the best odds of a great PK3 placement?
Oy. Your understanding of DC is so poor; you're setting yourself up for dreadfully bad decisions.
You can get free PK3 via the lottery - ANYWHERE - but you can't necessarily get it in your neighborhood. The most desirable neighborhoods (especially for old people) don't offer free PK3. So move where you want to live, apply for the lottery (fail, obviously) and then commute to the free PreK.
Everyone knows that the best PK3 are immersion charters, but you would be a horrible human being to take one of those (LAMB or YY) and then leave. Your children would be cursed for life, and they'd deserve it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:First time posters here so please be gentle.
We are looking to buy in DC from out of state. DS is 6 months old. What neigborhood will give us the best odds of a great PK3 placement?
Oy. Your understanding of DC is so poor; you're setting yourself up for dreadfully bad decisions.
You can get free PK3 via the lottery - ANYWHERE - but you can't necessarily get it in your neighborhood. The most desirable neighborhoods (especially for old people) don't offer free PK3. So move where you want to live, apply for the lottery (fail, obviously) and then commute to the free PreK.
Everyone knows that the best PK3 are immersion charters, but you would be a horrible human being to take one of those (LAMB or YY) and then leave. Your children would be cursed for life, and they'd deserve it.
If you apply for PK3 in the lottery, get a spot, and then leave, you will be exercising your rights as a citizen and a taxpayer, and will not be a horrible human being.
For most schools, but taking a spot at a school like LAMB is a dick move because they don't admit in the upper grades.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:First time posters here so please be gentle.
We are looking to buy in DC from out of state. DS is 6 months old. What neigborhood will give us the best odds of a great PK3 placement?
Oy. Your understanding of DC is so poor; you're setting yourself up for dreadfully bad decisions.
You can get free PK3 via the lottery - ANYWHERE - but you can't necessarily get it in your neighborhood. The most desirable neighborhoods (especially for old people) don't offer free PK3. So move where you want to live, apply for the lottery (fail, obviously) and then commute to the free PreK.
Everyone knows that the best PK3 are immersion charters, but you would be a horrible human being to take one of those (LAMB or YY) and then leave. Your children would be cursed for life, and they'd deserve it.
If you apply for PK3 in the lottery, get a spot, and then leave, you will be exercising your rights as a citizen and a taxpayer, and will not be a horrible human being.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Cap Hill in the Cluster boundary. Peabody is great and it's bigger than many other ECE programs - still not a given. You also have SWS, CH Montessori and charters as a citywide backups. Nothing guaranteed. Brent is great but tough for PK3 without siblings if you're IB.
^^ and in 3 ... 2 ... 1 ... someone will chine in to disparage Hill middle schools![]()
Er, no. OP said they would not be here that long, so it's irrelevant.
that never stops DCUM crowd from trolling CH middle schools
Hmmm...
Something tells me it's not the collective DCUM trolling CH middle schools. Something tells me it's people who are actually familiar with CH middle schools...
Swami says: "Bingo!"
no -- it's usually people who moved to the suburbs a decade ago and never got woke
Oh. Another case of an old lady on DCUM thinking that the deliberate use of poor grammar makes her "cool"....
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:First time posters here so please be gentle.
We are looking to buy in DC from out of state. DS is 6 months old. What neigborhood will give us the best odds of a great PK3 placement?
Oy. Your understanding of DC is so poor; you're setting yourself up for dreadfully bad decisions.
You can get free PK3 via the lottery - ANYWHERE - but you can't necessarily get it in your neighborhood. The most desirable neighborhoods (especially for old people) don't offer free PK3. So move where you want to live, apply for the lottery (fail, obviously) and then commute to the free PreK.
Everyone knows that the best PK3 are immersion charters, but you would be a horrible human being to take one of those (LAMB or YY) and then leave. Your children would be cursed for life, and they'd deserve it.
Anonymous wrote:What I don't understand, OP, is why with a budget of $1.2M you're worried about getting into free PK3. Are you planning on being house poor? Agree you should buy IB for one of the best elementary schools, most of which don't offer PK3 at all.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Cap Hill in the Cluster boundary. Peabody is great and it's bigger than many other ECE programs - still not a given. You also have SWS, CH Montessori and charters as a citywide backups. Nothing guaranteed. Brent is great but tough for PK3 without siblings if you're IB.
^^ and in 3 ... 2 ... 1 ... someone will chine in to disparage Hill middle schools![]()
Er, no. OP said they would not be here that long, so it's irrelevant.
that never stops DCUM crowd from trolling CH middle schools
Hmmm...
Something tells me it's not the collective DCUM trolling CH middle schools. Something tells me it's people who are actually familiar with CH middle schools...
Swami says: "Bingo!"
no -- it's usually people who moved to the suburbs a decade ago and never got woke
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hi - Op here. Our budget is up to $1.2M and would be ok with either a 2 bedroom row house or 3 br condo. We will leave DC after about 3 years and then return 3 to 4 years later from overseas. We intend to rent out the place before we leave but then look to either sell it or move into it when we return depending on our circumstances/needs.
I understand that IB is not a guarantee but since school location is our biggest consideration we would love to be strategically located for the most choices. Thanks to PP with the suggestion of trying certain clusters and then picking blocks based on that. I will start researching that.
Do you plan to ditch the kids abroad when you return? You are looking at this whole thing so wrong and short-sighted. The only way to guarantee an inbound prek3/pk4 spot is to move to a neighborhood with bad elementary+ schools.
I know, right? They're letting a $20,000 decision (rough cost of 2 years of private pre-K over public pre-K) drive their entire house purchase.
OP, if what you want is to be inbound for a good elementary school, pick that school. $1.2 mil is enough, get you in any number of good school boundaries - Brent, Maury, some of the NW schools if you look hard. But this is DC and preschool is literally a lottery. You are not going to be able to have "great PK3" as a reasonable goal because chance plays a huge role in getting a slot.