Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is this a troll post?
Does a real city person not know about ANY other options than Wilson HS vs moving to *McLean*?!?!?
Read up on charters or just move to your people in Virginia.
Yep, Bethesda and Rosslyn/Clarendon are probably almost as city as Capital Hill, maybe more so unless you consider ‘city’ == ‘crime’
Rosslyn/Clarendon and Bethesda are definitely more city than freaking Tenleytown!
Are you 25 OP? Most people outgrow their “city-mouse, country-mouse” obsession.
And OMG, Sidwell?? ROFL. literally.
So it sounds like $80k for private school is a stretch you need to avoid, don’t want to gamble on charters, and want... whatever ‘city’ means. Walkable to metro? Walkable to grocery store and library? Walkable to parks? Property crime? What are you looking for?
It’s not a city mouse country mouse issue, it’s that we like Capitol Hill and moving to a cookie-cutter neighborhood just sounds very unappealing. Our kids can go to the museums, or they could before Covid. I won’t get into the details but it comes down to Capitol Hill is a wonderful neighborhood. However if we had to say stay in DC, which we’d like to, Moving up to North West sounds pretty good. Yes metro accessibility and walk ability are huge primary considerations we don’t wanna have to commute 15 miles each way or staying an hour of traffic or anything like that. I think you’re right with the charter school ideas.
I live in and love Capitol Hill as well. It has a vibe, walkability and convenience that you can't really get in Bethesda or the Virginia near in suburbs.
If we stay for HS we're considering BASIS, Washington Latin, DCI, School Without Walls as possibilities that wouldn't require moving. Friends school in Silver Spring is another private option we'd consider as well. Depending on the age of your kids, Eastern might be an option by then as well.
Eastern might be an option if your kids exist as eggs in your ovaries. We heard the same talk about Eastern being a viable option by now almost twenty years ago.
Valedictorian at Eastern a year ago got a full ride to Duke.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is this a troll post?
Does a real city person not know about ANY other options than Wilson HS vs moving to *McLean*?!?!?
Read up on charters or just move to your people in Virginia.
Yep, Bethesda and Rosslyn/Clarendon are probably almost as city as Capital Hill, maybe more so unless you consider ‘city’ == ‘crime’
Rosslyn/Clarendon and Bethesda are definitely more city than freaking Tenleytown!
Are you 25 OP? Most people outgrow their “city-mouse, country-mouse” obsession.
And OMG, Sidwell?? ROFL. literally.
So it sounds like $80k for private school is a stretch you need to avoid, don’t want to gamble on charters, and want... whatever ‘city’ means. Walkable to metro? Walkable to grocery store and library? Walkable to parks? Property crime? What are you looking for?
It’s not a city mouse country mouse issue, it’s that we like Capitol Hill and moving to a cookie-cutter neighborhood just sounds very unappealing. Our kids can go to the museums, or they could before Covid. I won’t get into the details but it comes down to Capitol Hill is a wonderful neighborhood. However if we had to say stay in DC, which we’d like to, Moving up to North West sounds pretty good. Yes metro accessibility and walk ability are huge primary considerations we don’t wanna have to commute 15 miles each way or staying an hour of traffic or anything like that. I think you’re right with the charter school ideas.
I live in and love Capitol Hill as well. It has a vibe, walkability and convenience that you can't really get in Bethesda or the Virginia near in suburbs.
If we stay for HS we're considering BASIS, Washington Latin, DCI, School Without Walls as possibilities that wouldn't require moving. Friends school in Silver Spring is another private option we'd consider as well. Depending on the age of your kids, Eastern might be an option by then as well.
Eastern might be an option if your kids exist as eggs in your ovaries. We heard the same talk about Eastern being a viable option by now almost twenty years ago.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is this a troll post?
Does a real city person not know about ANY other options than Wilson HS vs moving to *McLean*?!?!?
Read up on charters or just move to your people in Virginia.
Yep, Bethesda and Rosslyn/Clarendon are probably almost as city as Capital Hill, maybe more so unless you consider ‘city’ == ‘crime’
Rosslyn/Clarendon and Bethesda are definitely more city than freaking Tenleytown!
Are you 25 OP? Most people outgrow their “city-mouse, country-mouse” obsession.
And OMG, Sidwell?? ROFL. literally.
So it sounds like $80k for private school is a stretch you need to avoid, don’t want to gamble on charters, and want... whatever ‘city’ means. Walkable to metro? Walkable to grocery store and library? Walkable to parks? Property crime? What are you looking for?
It’s not a city mouse country mouse issue, it’s that we like Capitol Hill and moving to a cookie-cutter neighborhood just sounds very unappealing. Our kids can go to the museums, or they could before Covid. I won’t get into the details but it comes down to Capitol Hill is a wonderful neighborhood. However if we had to say stay in DC, which we’d like to, Moving up to North West sounds pretty good. Yes metro accessibility and walk ability are huge primary considerations we don’t wanna have to commute 15 miles each way or staying an hour of traffic or anything like that. I think you’re right with the charter school ideas.
I live in and love Capitol Hill as well. It has a vibe, walkability and convenience that you can't really get in Bethesda or the Virginia near in suburbs.
If we stay for HS we're considering BASIS, Washington Latin, DCI, School Without Walls as possibilities that wouldn't require moving. Friends school in Silver Spring is another private option we'd consider as well. Depending on the age of your kids, Eastern might be an option by then as well.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is this a troll post?
Does a real city person not know about ANY other options than Wilson HS vs moving to *McLean*?!?!?
Read up on charters or just move to your people in Virginia.
Yep, Bethesda and Rosslyn/Clarendon are probably almost as city as Capital Hill, maybe more so unless you consider ‘city’ == ‘crime’
Rosslyn/Clarendon and Bethesda are definitely more city than freaking Tenleytown!
Are you 25 OP? Most people outgrow their “city-mouse, country-mouse” obsession.
And OMG, Sidwell?? ROFL. literally.
So it sounds like $80k for private school is a stretch you need to avoid, don’t want to gamble on charters, and want... whatever ‘city’ means. Walkable to metro? Walkable to grocery store and library? Walkable to parks? Property crime? What are you looking for?
It’s not a city mouse country mouse issue, it’s that we like Capitol Hill and moving to a cookie-cutter neighborhood just sounds very unappealing. Our kids can go to the museums, or they could before Covid. I won’t get into the details but it comes down to Capitol Hill is a wonderful neighborhood. However if we had to say stay in DC, which we’d like to, Moving up to North West sounds pretty good. Yes metro accessibility and walk ability are huge primary considerations we don’t wanna have to commute 15 miles each way or staying an hour of traffic or anything like that. I think you’re right with the charter school ideas.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, how long have you lived in DC? And specifically what do you like about Capitol Hill?
I ask because I'm mildly surprised that you seem so lost on this issue. Your options are not Sidwell (ha, how are you even certain you could get in there -- it's extremely competitive), Wilson, or McLean, obviously. There are close in suburbs with good high schools that are metro accessible, a lot of people do that. There are privates that are less competitive than Sidwell and less expensive (including privates in the burbs!). There are high schools other than Wilson, not just charters but also the application high schools (which, if you're so certain you'd get into Sidwell shouldn't scare you). Heck, there's even Eastern and a really involved parent and a determined kid, which could be a perfectly good option if you are really committed to staying in the city.
If you are just looking for good neighborhoods inbound for Wilson, try the Real Estate forum. But if you are really asking "Hey, I love Cap Hill but where will my kid go to high school?" it really does seem almost like a troll post because it's such a perpetual issue for everyone in the area and everyone has to figure out a way to navigate it in a way that matches with their values and preferences. But I don't know anyone on the Hill with kids in elementary or middle who doesn't have some sense of what the options are.
Don’t kid yourself honey. Sidwell is relatively easy to get into. Just have deep pockets. Also you just generally sound annoying so please be gone.
Anonymous wrote:We live on Capitol Hill and send our kid to Basis. Easy peasy.
Anonymous wrote:OP, how long have you lived in DC? And specifically what do you like about Capitol Hill?
I ask because I'm mildly surprised that you seem so lost on this issue. Your options are not Sidwell (ha, how are you even certain you could get in there -- it's extremely competitive), Wilson, or McLean, obviously. There are close in suburbs with good high schools that are metro accessible, a lot of people do that. There are privates that are less competitive than Sidwell and less expensive (including privates in the burbs!). There are high schools other than Wilson, not just charters but also the application high schools (which, if you're so certain you'd get into Sidwell shouldn't scare you). Heck, there's even Eastern and a really involved parent and a determined kid, which could be a perfectly good option if you are really committed to staying in the city.
If you are just looking for good neighborhoods inbound for Wilson, try the Real Estate forum. But if you are really asking "Hey, I love Cap Hill but where will my kid go to high school?" it really does seem almost like a troll post because it's such a perpetual issue for everyone in the area and everyone has to figure out a way to navigate it in a way that matches with their values and preferences. But I don't know anyone on the Hill with kids in elementary or middle who doesn't have some sense of what the options are.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Folks, the OP is literally free to love whatever they do without having their post hijacked by a wounded crew who wants them to know that something else is just as good.
I see many differences between CH and Bethesda. I live in one of them, and I could live happily in the other. But I could totally see someone prefer CH and ask a reasonable, if uninformed, question about high school prospects. (Though yes OP, if you're not trolling, just search the forum.)
I hate Bethesda but I’d live on the Hill. There’s a difference. Sorry people on here are so in love with “urban” Bethesda and the like you can’t tell.
The OP clearly has a 2 year old, ok? Let them do a search.
And McLean? They’re also clueless, or probably a Republican?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Folks, the OP is literally free to love whatever they do without having their post hijacked by a wounded crew who wants them to know that something else is just as good.
I see many differences between CH and Bethesda. I live in one of them, and I could live happily in the other. But I could totally see someone prefer CH and ask a reasonable, if uninformed, question about high school prospects. (Though yes OP, if you're not trolling, just search the forum.)
I hate Bethesda but I’d live on the Hill. There’s a difference. Sorry people on here are so in love with “urban” Bethesda and the like you can’t tell.
The OP clearly has a 2 year old, ok? Let them do a search.
And McLean? They’re also clueless, or probably a Republican?