Anonymous wrote:Also since when does "established IB school" = AU Park? I was the original poster of that comment and I meant move into Brent district as other posters suggested. If I had it to do over again, I'd move into Ross. There are plenty of great, urban neighborhoods with schools that are good and rapidly getting better. If you have the money to be choosy, it's worthwhile in my opinion to play attention to the school boundaries.
Anonymous wrote:22:19 is the new stupid. What makes you so sure that people in AU Park seek out a monolingual education? Because they may not be frothing at the mouth at the slight chance of getting into Yu Ying? Thankfully, people in AU Park don't have to worry about the gamble of charter school admittance and there's nothing stopping them from having their children learn a second language.
Anonymous wrote:OP, if you have the money to spend and going to public school is important to you, buy in a neighborhood with an established in boundary school. When we bought, we did not have children and did not even look at the school situation. Fast forward 6 years and our IB school has not even taken a step towards being an acceptable choice for us. So not every school is just going to magically turn around. And you can count us in the group that has been unsuccessfully playing the lottery for 2 years. We will most likely go private for K which is not my preference (for reasons completely unrelated to money) at all.
Anonymous wrote:So, the downtown feel is the reason??? I didn't realize Capitol Hill/SW had such a "downtown" feel.....WOW!
15:11 - "Obvious reasons?" What are those? Too residential or too dark?
Anonymous wrote:OP, if you have the money to spend and going to public school is important to you, buy in a neighborhood with an established in boundary school. When we bought, we did not have children and did not even look at the school situation. Fast forward 6 years and our IB school has not even taken a step towards being an acceptable choice for us. So not every school is just going to magically turn around. And you can count us in the group that has been unsuccessfully playing the lottery for 2 years. We will most likely go private for K which is not my preference (for reasons completely unrelated to money) at all.
Anonymous wrote:1/3 of the kids at Payne do not come from the homeless shelter. This is wildly inaccurate and actually harmful to parents who are considering Payne.
And Payne isn't struggling to keep families past K. The 2011/12 school year was the first year that "gentrifiers" tried Payne. Of the 6 or 7 families in preschool and preK, all but maybe one were very happy atleast for that school year. And about half are staying for the next grade. I don't know if any are thinking of Payne longterm, but not because Payne is bad. I think a lot of parents in the less popular schools play the lottery every year and then weigh options. My child was at Payne and the school was safe and orderly. We would have stayed but are moving our child to be with his sibling.