Good luck! We may be switching places with you as we're thinking about heading back!
Anonymous wrote:I will visit Maury, Brent, Ludlow, (and Watkins? But not Wilson? I really liked what I read here about Wilson) West and Shepard. I think? Maybe Ross, but don't know if we can afford Ross's neighborhood and still get something we'd want to live in. I assume also it's like New York--once you're IB, you can move OOB? So... we could move IB for a year and then change locations and keep the school?
I'm sorry, I haven't read the whole thread, but have you visited the city OP? I really dislike the hill - tends to be more conservative and uppity, in my opinion. I personally love the Dupont/Logan circle area and would echo a few other posters at trying to get a small 2 bedroom inbounds for Ross if you find you like that neighborhood more.
ou know the lottery is over for next year, right? There's a second round but all the most popular schools are full. I think for next year at least inbounds is your only way to go.
Anonymous wrote:Okay, we won't speak of SWS again then![]()
Lotteries for schools in New York are just as brutal, probably, but there are fewer of them. I guess the good news is, neither place is San Francisco, which sounds truly awful.
Now that I have some tentative inbound plans, what charters would I list on the lottery? Or where is the site with charter information--because it seems piecemeal. I found the school profiles site on the DC public schools page, but the charter stuff is harder to parse.
dcmom wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Bancroft, like Oyster, has no English-only track. If you move in-boundary for 3rd grade both schools have to take you and do whatever they can to get you up to speed, but I wouldn't recommend it.
Much as I'd love the kid to learn Spanish, throwing her into it seems a little cruel, yeah. I've thought about it.
Wait, What does SWS stand for? And where is it? And it's a charter?
School-Within-School: It is an extremely popular DCPS that is city-wide and is Reggio-inspired. I think next year they may have a 3rd grade, but there is no chance you will get in given its popularity, unfortunately. There are no boundaries so you cannot move in boundary to get in.
Anonymous wrote:
Bancroft, like Oyster, has no English-only track. If you move in-boundary for 3rd grade both schools have to take you and do whatever they can to get you up to speed, but I wouldn't recommend it.
Much as I'd love the kid to learn Spanish, throwing her into it seems a little cruel, yeah. I've thought about it.
Wait, What does SWS stand for? And where is it? And it's a charter?
Bancroft, like Oyster, has no English-only track. If you move in-boundary for 3rd grade both schools have to take you and do whatever they can to get you up to speed, but I wouldn't recommend it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Closest thing to Clinton Hill/Ft. Greene is probably Capitol Hill. You'd want to rent a rowhouse inbound for Brent or Maury elementary schools. You'll have a few years to get the lay of the land for middle school. You may have to move, eventually, but there are significant school boundary issues in play right now - nothing is certain for anyone.
Having lived in BKLYN, second this. FWIW, Columbia Heights/Mount Pleasant do as well. OP, DC will never be NYC. Will help you tremendously to embrace that as soon as you can. If you are going to be in DC for the duration, then you probably want to figure out the best possible feeder option, which would mean upper NW DC.
Anonymous wrote:I lived in NY back when Clinton Hill was still Bedstuy, so I'm wondering what the racial/socioeconomic mix is now, and what the test scores are for your current schools, and your level of comfort with a changing school environment. I imagine the schools in Ft. Greene/Clinton Hill are still on an upward trajectory performance wise? I live in Petworth and you can get a great house for your price range, but very few professional parents have 3rd graders in the local schools. That said, I don't think it's out of the question. If you are looking EOTP but not into immersion programs, I have heard good things about West, and the scores are reasonably high. I know parents with kids currently in PK and 1st grade who said they would definitely consider staying through 5th. The principal is really energetic and approachable, so definitely organize a tour for when you come out here. There is also an engaged parent group. At Powell, the draw is really the Spanish immersion track, and the highest grade that I know people with kids is 1st but all in the bilingual program. I do not know the quality of the English-only track. Again, you can definitely visit and there is an engaged parent group. Bancroft is another popular "rising" school in Mt. Pleasant, but I feel like again it is the Spanish track that is attracting the professional class. But Mt. Pleasant is an awesome neighborhood. It seem like for an English-only option I would look at West, Brent, Maury, Ross, ... I'm IB for Barnard and it seems to be an extremely well-run school with beautiful facilities, but your daughter would really be an "only" in her class. That said, I was pretty impressed with the classrooms I saw.
Anonymous wrote:How do you get downtown from Glover Park? Also... price...