Anonymous wrote:RM doesn’t actually offer access to many IB classes for students outside the magnet. Not sure what the point of IB is if kids don’t pursue the full Diploma. BCC also offers IBD but access seems limited to the highest achievers.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The tradeoffs for MoCo on schools do seem bigger than for NOVA due to MoCo's rigid, intense, entrance test-based tracking, at least in the eastern swathe of the county. If you can afford to move from CH in-boundary for Whitman or BCC in the Bethesda area, the tracking is much less of a problem.
you mean Blair and RM? At both of those schools the kids can take AP classes even if they aren’t in the test-in program. At RM they can take the IB classes starting in 11th I believe.
but anyway yes, after a lot of research, our most likely move would be to an apartment zoned for BCC. I actually like the Silver Spring area mucb better than Bethesda, but Blair just seems intimidating.
Anonymous wrote:The tradeoffs for MoCo on schools do seem bigger than for NOVA due to MoCo's rigid, intense, entrance test-based tracking, at least in the eastern swathe of the county. If you can afford to move from CH in-boundary for Whitman or BCC in the Bethesda area, the tracking is much less of a problem.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:These comments on this thread have honestly just made me glad we're leaving the Hill. There are great people here but there are also some smug jerks and I'm happy to leave them behind. CH is great but it's not the last good place. It doesn't even have a decent HS! it's obviously not perfect.
We've been taking our kids from CH to MoCo for classic music training on weekends for almost a decade. The experience has taught me that CH doesn't have a monopoly on smug jerks. You know that MoCo is a v. competitive place, where kids try to test into all-GT public schools from 3rd grade? Later on, they try to test into GT school-within-a-school middle school programs. In 8th grade, they try to test into high-powered school-within-a-school high school magnets.
What I hear from Blair parents that we've gotten to know through the music programs is that if your bright teen doesn't fails to test into one of the Blair magnets (STEM or Communication Arts) is that they can feel like second class citizen in the school. There's a pecking order at Blair, and Richard Montgomery (IB Diploma magnet). No point in pretending otherwise. If we move, and we may, we'll go for Arlington or McClean, where IB Diploma access is based on grades in prerequisite subjects, not an entrance exam.
The grass is always greener.
Of course. Nowhere is perfect. Including CH, which is why the people acting like it's utopia sound so out of touch.
Pretty much anywhere you go, there are tradeoffs.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:These comments on this thread have honestly just made me glad we're leaving the Hill. There are great people here but there are also some smug jerks and I'm happy to leave them behind. CH is great but it's not the last good place. It doesn't even have a decent HS! it's obviously not perfect.
We've been taking our kids from CH to MoCo for classic music training on weekends for almost a decade. The experience has taught me that CH doesn't have a monopoly on smug jerks. You know that MoCo is a v. competitive place, where kids try to test into all-GT public schools from 3rd grade? Later on, they try to test into GT school-within-a-school middle school programs. In 8th grade, they try to test into high-powered school-within-a-school high school magnets.
What I hear from Blair parents that we've gotten to know through the music programs is that if your bright teen doesn't fails to test into one of the Blair magnets (STEM or Communication Arts) is that they can feel like second class citizen in the school. There's a pecking order at Blair, and Richard Montgomery (IB Diploma magnet). No point in pretending otherwise. If we move, and we may, we'll go for Arlington or McClean, where IB Diploma access is based on grades in prerequisite subjects, not an entrance exam.
The grass is always greener.
Why are you surprised by this? Of course there is a pecking order and kids know which kids are the smart ones in the higher level classes or programs. That’s life. Some kids are bothered by this and some could care less.
It doesn’t sound like you are confident your kid can get into the program and why you are not considering Blair. That’s fine but you can’t protect your kid from the realities of life forever. The sooner they realize that there are kids much smarter than them the better. What is important is not being the smartest but doing your best so that you reach your full potential.
Thanks for the life advice grandma.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:These comments on this thread have honestly just made me glad we're leaving the Hill. There are great people here but there are also some smug jerks and I'm happy to leave them behind. CH is great but it's not the last good place. It doesn't even have a decent HS! it's obviously not perfect.
We've been taking our kids from CH to MoCo for classic music training on weekends for almost a decade. The experience has taught me that CH doesn't have a monopoly on smug jerks. You know that MoCo is a v. competitive place, where kids try to test into all-GT public schools from 3rd grade? Later on, they try to test into GT school-within-a-school middle school programs. In 8th grade, they try to test into high-powered school-within-a-school high school magnets.
What I hear from Blair parents that we've gotten to know through the music programs is that if your bright teen doesn't fails to test into one of the Blair magnets (STEM or Communication Arts) is that they can feel like second class citizen in the school. There's a pecking order at Blair, and Richard Montgomery (IB Diploma magnet). No point in pretending otherwise. If we move, and we may, we'll go for Arlington or McClean, where IB Diploma access is based on grades in prerequisite subjects, not an entrance exam.
The grass is always greener.
Why are you surprised by this? Of course there is a pecking order and kids know which kids are the smart ones in the higher level classes or programs. That’s life. Some kids are bothered by this and some could care less.
It doesn’t sound like you are confident your kid can get into the program and why you are not considering Blair. That’s fine but you can’t protect your kid from the realities of life forever. The sooner they realize that there are kids much smarter than them the better. What is important is not being the smartest but doing your best so that you reach your full potential.
Anonymous wrote:These comments on this thread have honestly just made me glad we're leaving the Hill. There are great people here but there are also some smug jerks and I'm happy to leave them behind. CH is great but it's not the last good place. It doesn't even have a decent HS! it's obviously not perfect.
We've been taking our kids from CH to MoCo for classic music training on weekends for almost a decade. The experience has taught me that CH doesn't have a monopoly on smug jerks. You know that MoCo is a v. competitive place, where kids try to test into all-GT public schools from 3rd grade? Later on, they try to test into GT school-within-a-school middle school programs. In 8th grade, they try to test into high-powered school-within-a-school high school magnets.
What I hear from Blair parents that we've gotten to know through the music programs is that if your bright teen doesn't fails to test into one of the Blair magnets (STEM or Communication Arts) is that they can feel like second class citizen in the school. There's a pecking order at Blair, and Richard Montgomery (IB Diploma magnet). No point in pretending otherwise. If we move, and we may, we'll go for Arlington or McClean, where IB Diploma access is based on grades in prerequisite subjects, not an entrance exam.
The grass is always greener.
Anonymous wrote:These comments on this thread have honestly just made me glad we're leaving the Hill. There are great people here but there are also some smug jerks and I'm happy to leave them behind. CH is great but it's not the last good place. It doesn't even have a decent HS! it's obviously not perfect.
We've been taking our kids from CH to MoCo for classic music training on weekends for almost a decade. The experience has taught me that CH doesn't have a monopoly on smug jerks. You know that MoCo is a v. competitive place, where kids try to test into all-GT public schools from 3rd grade? Later on, they try to test into GT school-within-a-school middle school programs. In 8th grade, they try to test into high-powered school-within-a-school high school magnets.
What I hear from Blair parents that we've gotten to know through the music programs is that if your bright teen doesn't fails to test into one of the Blair magnets (STEM or Communication Arts) is that they can feel like second class citizen in the school. There's a pecking order at Blair, and Richard Montgomery (IB Diploma magnet). No point in pretending otherwise. If we move, and we may, we'll go for Arlington or McClean, where IB Diploma access is based on grades in prerequisite subjects, not an entrance exam.
The grass is always greener.
Anonymous wrote:These comments on this thread have honestly just made me glad we're leaving the Hill. There are great people here but there are also some smug jerks and I'm happy to leave them behind. CH is great but it's not the last good place. It doesn't even have a decent HS! it's obviously not perfect.
We've been taking our kids from CH to MoCo for classic music training on weekends for almost a decade. The experience has taught me that CH doesn't have a monopoly on smug jerks. You know that MoCo is a v. competitive place, where kids try to test into all-GT public schools from 3rd grade? Later on, they try to test into GT school-within-a-school middle school programs. In 8th grade, they try to test into high-powered school-within-a-school high school magnets.
What I hear from Blair parents that we've gotten to know through the music programs is that if your bright teen doesn't fails to test into one of the Blair magnets (STEM or Communication Arts) is that they can feel like second class citizen in the school. There's a pecking order at Blair, and Richard Montgomery (IB Diploma magnet). No point in pretending otherwise. If we move, and we may, we'll go for Arlington or McClean, where IB Diploma access is based on grades in prerequisite subjects, not an entrance exam.
The grass is always greener.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:To the renting in Hill East poster (and to the lesser degree to the OP), if you overall really like the neighborhood, why not just stay? Leave if and when it actually stops working. Its maybe kind of like the observation in the Lean In book - people get worried about middle and high school and not having a rock solid next 5-10 year plan but then they leave far before it actually stops working.
Not OP or the Hill East poster, but the reason we are thinking of leaving before it "stops working" is that we'd like to avoid a situation where our kid is 12 or 13, we have run out of options on the Hill, and we have to uproot them not only form our neighborhood and school, but also their extra-curricular activities and non-school friends.
It's easier to move a kid at 7 or 8 than once they've started MS. That's why even people who would be okay with SH or EH for middle still sometimes move pre-emptively, because if you bank on Walls or Banneker (or even private) for HS and it doesn't work out as you hoped, moving for high school is going to be more painful than moving when your kid is in 4th or 5th grade and there is still time for them to establish new friend groups and extra-curriculars in another community before they are totally entrenched.
Lot of people move kids to elite privates, boarding and magnets in 9th grade.
In Upper NW maybe, but not from Capitol Hill. The Hill families we know who "went private" mostly enrolled in parochial high schools in VA or MD. What do you mean by magnets? Banneker or Walls? They're certainly not like magnets in MoCo or the one I attended in NYC as a teen (Stuyvesant). Kids can't apply to suburban magnets from DC, or past 8th grade in the burbs.
Oh god the NYC magnet troll has arrived.
The word “troll” doesn’t mean what you think it means
And there's more than one NYC magnet grad on CH and, presumably on DCUM. Two in our house alone, and two more next door.
Anonymous wrote:SJC (Saint Johns College), popular with Hill families, is hardly an elite private. SJC is a parochial high school, not all that hard to get into, tuition in the low 20s, around half what top non-sectarian programs are charging, e.g. Sidwell, NCS. St. Albans, Maret.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:To the renting in Hill East poster (and to the lesser degree to the OP), if you overall really like the neighborhood, why not just stay? Leave if and when it actually stops working. Its maybe kind of like the observation in the Lean In book - people get worried about middle and high school and not having a rock solid next 5-10 year plan but then they leave far before it actually stops working.
Not OP or the Hill East poster, but the reason we are thinking of leaving before it "stops working" is that we'd like to avoid a situation where our kid is 12 or 13, we have run out of options on the Hill, and we have to uproot them not only form our neighborhood and school, but also their extra-curricular activities and non-school friends.
It's easier to move a kid at 7 or 8 than once they've started MS. That's why even people who would be okay with SH or EH for middle still sometimes move pre-emptively, because if you bank on Walls or Banneker (or even private) for HS and it doesn't work out as you hoped, moving for high school is going to be more painful than moving when your kid is in 4th or 5th grade and there is still time for them to establish new friend groups and extra-curriculars in another community before they are totally entrenched.
Lot of people move kids to elite privates, boarding and magnets in 9th grade.
In Upper NW maybe, but not from Capitol Hill. The Hill families we know who "went private" mostly enrolled in parochial high schools in VA or MD. What do you mean by magnets? Banneker or Walls? They're certainly not like magnets in MoCo or the one I attended in NYC as a teen (Stuyvesant). Kids can't apply to suburban magnets from DC, or past 8th grade in the burbs.
Oh god the NYC magnet troll has arrived.
The word “troll” doesn’t mean what you think it means