donewithchicago wrote:Well thanks for all the responses. Truly. Even the ones I rolled my eyes really hard at.
All the feedback, positive and negative, does help to sharpen my focus and adjust my expectations. I think my housing budget might be too low, and I will adjust that.
I have a thick skin, so I'm not really thrown by the more aggressive replies. I will miss Midwestern friendliness though because, based on the replies in DCUM, I certainly won't be getting that out East, LOL!!!
Anonymous wrote:I think you may have also thrown people with the discussion of 'feeder' schools. I think the close in public schools are just better, and in general people who are committed to private school aren't in full day care- they have nannies and part day preschool.
Anonymous wrote:You got what you voted for.
donewithchicago wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you both work from home, why are you relocating to the DC area?
Because we're concerned at where Chicago is headed and how the city is being run. City broke, state broke, public school system in disarray and property taxes just went way up. I voted for Rahm, but he seems way in over his head. We want to see how this all plays out from a safe distance.

donewithchicago wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is really short sighted in Fairfax County. Pre-school is 2 years. FCPS is 13, and in many cases can provide a better education than privates. And different parts of the county have very different vibes, and parents with very different priorities. You really don't want to limit yourself to schools and neighborhoods. that are a bad fit in your quest for the perfect preschool experience. There are lots of high quality preschools, and you can find one in any area affluent enough to have really good schools.
So, start with your housing budget and tell us what you want out of your child's ES/MS/HS experience. The absolute best academics, with a push for AAP admittance and culminating in TJ? A more well rounded community experience (but still strong schools)? Would you be comfortable in a neighborhood where social status is very important, and all the moms SAH, live in 2 million dollar houses and wear full makeup to daily yoga? Or are you a professional, who want to be around other dual professional families? Do you really want urban and walkable? Or a more suburban feel with sidewalks and traditional neighborhoods? Even if location doesn't matter, the answer to these questions do.
What is TJ?
And this is a lot to mull over. Perhaps I should start with neighborhood and go from there? If I start with neighborhood can I be confident that I'll find good schools nearby?