Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, I would stay put. Why risk it? There truly is a huge gap between Wilson and the other comprehensives. These high schools average in the 700s composite on the sat-that is terrible.
I dunno, I'm a lot more sanguine about EOTP school improvement over the next decade. For better or worse, Washington DC is currently one of the most rapidly gentrifying cities in the country. If OP chooses a NW EOTP neighborhood that is rapidly turning over to young, educated professionals with kids, but with the space she wants, like say 16th St. Heights--that might be a decent risk to take. You could also look at EOTP neighborhoods that are currently IB for Wilson, Mt. Pleasant and Shepherd Park. All of these neighborhoods will appreciate more than their WOTP counterparts. In 10 years, if things are still uncertain for high school, you could move, try for application schools, or go private, like many have done in these neighborhoods for decades.
I'm one of the people you just described- educated, young and two kids, one about to enter PRE-K3. The issue is, ALL of the parents I know within my sons daycare cohort are all gearing up to leave EOTP. We live in upper CH/lower Petworth, the only people happy with their in bound options are those who are in at Bruce Monroe and are there for the Spanish and not because it's a school they would choose. They all applied to various charters and out of bound schools, didn't get in to any and are planning to leave. I think what people fail to discuss on these threads is that it's way more than just schools and test scores- it's the crime. We witness so much violence, prostitution, drug dealing, gun wars, package and car theft. The area is beautiful, long standing neighbors are wonderful, but the schools are shit and the crime is the tipping point. WOTP is more mellow, feels safer and calmer, in addition to better schools.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, I would stay put. Why risk it? There truly is a huge gap between Wilson and the other comprehensives. These high schools average in the 700s composite on the sat-that is terrible.
I dunno, I'm a lot more sanguine about EOTP school improvement over the next decade. For better or worse, Washington DC is currently one of the most rapidly gentrifying cities in the country. If OP chooses a NW EOTP neighborhood that is rapidly turning over to young, educated professionals with kids, but with the space she wants, like say 16th St. Heights--that might be a decent risk to take. You could also look at EOTP neighborhoods that are currently IB for Wilson, Mt. Pleasant and Shepherd Park. All of these neighborhoods will appreciate more than their WOTP counterparts. In 10 years, if things are still uncertain for high school, you could move, try for application schools, or go private, like many have done in these neighborhoods for decades.
Anonymous wrote:What about DCI for high school?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:^^ Sorry, more than $200K pure profit. Not that it matters. The point is that buying a house for “only” 10 years isn’t financially unreasonable.
Except it's not just about HS. OP, what middle school would you be considering?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The viable non-private high schools in dc:
Washington Latin
SWW
Basis
Wilson
Perhaps:
Banneker
McKinley Tech
DCI
Perhaps Banneker, what are you smoking? Banneker is far superior to Wilson. Look at the graduation rates, test scores, and college placement
It’s sat scores suck
There is a point of view that the SAT is a racially biased test.
Anonymous wrote:^^ Sorry, more than $200K pure profit. Not that it matters. The point is that buying a house for “only” 10 years isn’t financially unreasonable.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The viable non-private high schools in dc:
Washington Latin
SWW
Basis
Wilson
Perhaps:
Banneker
McKinley Tech
DCI
Perhaps Banneker, what are you smoking? Banneker is far superior to Wilson. Look at the graduation rates, test scores, and college placement
Anonymous wrote:I'm in the Wilson boundary with young kids and I'm planning to move out of the boundary by the time my kids are in HS. Like everyone has said here, high schools won't improve enough in 10 years, and that includes Wilson. I like where I'm at for elementary, but Wilson as a high school is unacceptable.