Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:People trying to convince the OP to move to the Hill- she already said they have ruled out living in the city. Respect that personal choice, just as everyone should respect your choice to stay in the city.
But she also said she wants the commute to be 20 minutes. Which is it?
Anonymous wrote:West side to east ?(i.e. Bethesda/CC) is easily an hour during rush hour. If you really want to live outside the city, downtown Silver Spring to Cap Hill can be done in about 30-35 minutes. Still, would recommend somewhere in DC and privates.
Anonymous wrote:At 6:45 you can get to Capitol Hill in 25 minutes from Bethesda if you are just over the line off Mass/Macarthur (Westgate, Westmoreland Hills, Sumner for example). You can even do it at 7:30. I did it for years. Getting home is another story. There is no way to do it in 25 mins except at maybe 1 pm.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm sure there are some good teachers in Arlington, but in my opinion going to a multi-decade proven system in MoCo is the better bet than taking a chance on an up and coming smaller system.
up and coming? Didn't realize I lived in a multi-million dollar transitional 'hood over here.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Cheverly, MD, it's about 15-20 minutes without traffic. Not sure about with traffic, but probably doable.
I was just going to recommend this!! I live and work on Capitol Hill and I love it (kids in public schools and doing great-- including Washington Latin for middle school) but if I had to move off Capitol Hill, this is where I would go. Very suburban enclave (private community swim and tennis club, nice backyards, etc.) yet so crazy close to the city. Not sure about the public schools-- my friends that live in Cheverly use the private school there. Kids can walk to school. House prices are way cheaper than in the city, so private school is affordable.
Horrible schools.
Anonymous wrote:I'm sure there are some good teachers in Arlington, but in my opinion going to a multi-decade proven system in MoCo is the better bet than taking a chance on an up and coming smaller system.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here - I hate commuting. The only problem with silver spring is the schools. I think we'd want a better school pyramid than what you find generally in silver spring. So I'm thinking I may have to suck up the Arlington commute to get better schools. Somehow I don't know anyone who actually makes that drive, and looking at it on google maps just doesn't illuminate things.
The schools in downtown Silver Spring are at least similar if not superior than Arlington. The commute, however, down North Capital St does kind of suck. Arlington driving can be ok or horrific, depending on the bridges.
Come on, be serious.
Actually that is a fact, not including yorktown most of the school in Silver Spring are similar or better.
Is this a fact or your opinion? What is your evidence?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here - I hate commuting. The only problem with silver spring is the schools. I think we'd want a better school pyramid than what you find generally in silver spring. So I'm thinking I may have to suck up the Arlington commute to get better schools. Somehow I don't know anyone who actually makes that drive, and looking at it on google maps just doesn't illuminate things.
The schools in downtown Silver Spring are at least similar if not superior than Arlington. The commute, however, down North Capital St does kind of suck. Arlington driving can be ok or horrific, depending on the bridges.
Come on, be serious.
Actually that is a fact, not including yorktown most of the school in Silver Spring are similar or better.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Cheverly, MD, it's about 15-20 minutes without traffic. Not sure about with traffic, but probably doable.
I was just going to recommend this!! I live and work on Capitol Hill and I love it (kids in public schools and doing great-- including Washington Latin for middle school) but if I had to move off Capitol Hill, this is where I would go. Very suburban enclave (private community swim and tennis club, nice backyards, etc.) yet so crazy close to the city. Not sure about the public schools-- my friends that live in Cheverly use the private school there. Kids can walk to school. House prices are way cheaper than in the city, so private school is affordable.
Horrible schools.