Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am current ACPS parent and I've had kids a both private and public. The best teacher we've had so far was at an acps school and the worst teacher we've had was a private school. There are good and bad teachers at both. You can get a good eduction at ACPS - its just a choice of what community you want to be a part of and what is best for your child.
That's a really cute idea, unless you want to attend Lyles Crouch but you can't afford to live in south Old Town.
Is Lyles Crouch the exception to ACPS schools being crappy?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:City of Falls Church too far? Taxes are high, but city management of schools is far superior to that of county-managed schools. Not much on the market, but perhaps you could snap something up in the spring.
It’s an IB, not AP school system.
We’re looking in the same price range/desired size as OP, open to FCC and Arlington, and based on what we’ve seen over the last year, OP is priced out of FCC. There just is so little on the market, and any SFH with that number of bedrooms is priced above $1.3 million, unless it needs a LOT of work or is very tiny, and that’s not even factoring in the higher taxes that would mean a higher monthly cost. OP’s better bet is Arlington, especially if public schools are in the plan. Alexandria just has a culture of private schools that Arlington does not and probably never will, since the only privates even located within Arlington are parochial, and not many at that. No private independent schools, and having to travel outside Arlington to attend them means fewer families are wiling to do that, especially when the public schools are good. And they are good. Even the higher poverty schools provide good outcomes for kids from MC homes. The kids who are being failed come to APS with many barriers to academic success, and like everywhere else throughout time, APS has not solved the issue. The main thing, as a PP pointed out, is that the “experience” won’t be the same in a high poverty neighborhood school. Fewer extracurriculars, fewer field trips, fewer “experiences,” because these are usually funded and organized by the PTA. But the education provided is the same. OP can probably find data on the PTA budgets and narrow their home search based on that info, if school “experience” matters to them.
Anonymous wrote:City of Falls Church too far? Taxes are high, but city management of schools is far superior to that of county-managed schools. Not much on the market, but perhaps you could snap something up in the spring.
It’s an IB, not AP school system.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am current ACPS parent and I've had kids a both private and public. The best teacher we've had so far was at an acps school and the worst teacher we've had was a private school. There are good and bad teachers at both. You can get a good eduction at ACPS - its just a choice of what community you want to be a part of and what is best for your child.
That's a really cute idea, unless you want to attend Lyles Crouch but you can't afford to live in south Old Town.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Arlington's schools are completely segregated. We have elementaries that are 70% poverty and ones that are 3% poverty. It's ridiculous. People will tell you they are all fine, but the reality is that middle class and upper middle class will try to avoid anything over 40%. You can find all those stats online. Boundaries in Arlington are a mess and will be for years. I used to think the schools here were good, but then we went private for COVID and I see huge gaps in my kids' educations. I can't speak to other jurisdictions, but I would not move here for the schools. Arlington is a great place to live, though. No one has big yards. But people are friendly. Lots of trails. Walkable neighborhoods. Good parks.
Exact same issue in Alexandria, and we have some higher poverty schools than 70%
I do think it's easier to transfer schools in Alexandria, not as easy as say a few years ago, but still possible if you are persistent.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am current ACPS parent and I've had kids a both private and public. The best teacher we've had so far was at an acps school and the worst teacher we've had was a private school. There are good and bad teachers at both. You can get a good eduction at ACPS - its just a choice of what community you want to be a part of and what is best for your child.
That's a really cute idea, unless you want to attend Lyles Crouch but you can't afford to live in south Old Town.
I think you are deliberately misinterpreting PPs statement. All schools can have good communities--yes even the Title I schools. PP was encouraging people to explore.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am current ACPS parent and I've had kids a both private and public. The best teacher we've had so far was at an acps school and the worst teacher we've had was a private school. There are good and bad teachers at both. You can get a good eduction at ACPS - its just a choice of what community you want to be a part of and what is best for your child.
That's a really cute idea, unless you want to attend Lyles Crouch but you can't afford to live in south Old Town.
Anonymous wrote:Arlington's schools are completely segregated. We have elementaries that are 70% poverty and ones that are 3% poverty. It's ridiculous. People will tell you they are all fine, but the reality is that middle class and upper middle class will try to avoid anything over 40%. You can find all those stats online. Boundaries in Arlington are a mess and will be for years. I used to think the schools here were good, but then we went private for COVID and I see huge gaps in my kids' educations. I can't speak to other jurisdictions, but I would not move here for the schools. Arlington is a great place to live, though. No one has big yards. But people are friendly. Lots of trails. Walkable neighborhoods. Good parks.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am current ACPS parent and I've had kids a both private and public. The best teacher we've had so far was at an acps school and the worst teacher we've had was a private school. There are good and bad teachers at both. You can get a good eduction at ACPS - its just a choice of what community you want to be a part of and what is best for your child.
That's a really cute idea, unless you want to attend Lyles Crouch but you can't afford to live in south Old Town.
Anonymous wrote:I am current ACPS parent and I've had kids a both private and public. The best teacher we've had so far was at an acps school and the worst teacher we've had was a private school. There are good and bad teachers at both. You can get a good eduction at ACPS - its just a choice of what community you want to be a part of and what is best for your child.