Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Clearly you don't live on Capitol Hill
Sure, Capitol Hill has been mostly insulated from the recent downturn, but there is a tipping point for every neighborhood. The gains can't go on ad infinitum. Someone who buys now may not expect to realize the gains that others in the past have.
Anonymous wrote:Clearly you don't live on Capitol Hill
Anonymous wrote:Back to the question at hand. No one has said this outright so I will. If you have $800k for a house, you can definitely buy in the Brrent district, and, in my opinion, you should. It is a great area near everything including all the Navy Yard stuff. Plus you get a good school through 5th grade. But, you have to make a sacrifice ( can't have everything in this life ). You will have to buy small and/or run down. Personally, I would go for small. 10 years down the line, when you are feeling cramped you can sell at a profit, ask the principal to let your kid finish at Brent and move bigger somewhere else on the hill. But you have to suck it up and not have your dream house right now. You can have a good enough house in a dreamy neighborhood instead
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What I don't understand about the posts from the Chinese community is this: won't your kids learn more Chinese at an imperfect YY than in a nice WOTP school? I grew up with a lot of ABCs (or immigrated while very young), and while their spoken Chinese (usually Cantonese) was very good (interacting with their families in Chinese etc, interpreting for parents etc), their reading/writing wasn't as good because their schooling was in English. Attending YY (even if their home language was Cantonese) would have helped with that (if it had been an option). So how do you deal with that as an ABC family?
Language acquisition, and learning Chinese characters, isn't our only, our even our primary, concern. YY's set-up is simply too far removed from the E. Asian immigrant experience for most of us to want to get invovled. Just read these posts - are opinions are valued? We get laughed out of court for whatever we suggest (e.g Chinese administrators). We deal with being Chinese by emphasizing our culture in family and community circles. We are certainly not the most outward-looking immigrant group. Individuals may be different, but collectively, we aren't as inclined to reach out as Westerners. That's the way we're raised.
Anonymous wrote:geez! she doesn't even have kids yet! why not buy a house where she is happy now? She could sell or rent it out later if she is in the minority of people that A) have children and B) can't find any decent school options in DC.
Anonymous wrote: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.
+1. The bilingual charter schools are overrated anyway. Without immersion MS options, collectively, the little kids in them, whose language skills generally aren't being reinforced at home (almost the entire Yu Ying population as there's no Chinese community behind the school, vs. Oyster, supported by a Latino community), are likely to have a hard time hanging onto their "fluency." CH parents in particular tend to use YY and others to escape not-so-great neighborhood schools, not because they have a connection to the immersion language/culture, or a definite path to Intl Bacca in HS.
You're better off starting with a solid IB ES school and seeing if lottery luck at an immersion school works for you later. Can't agree more with the poster who suggested that. Housing prices are rising a lot faster than salaries - it can be difficult to afford to move after you already have a kid or two.
Anonymous wrote:What I don't understand about the posts from the Chinese community is this: won't your kids learn more Chinese at an imperfect YY than in a nice WOTP school? I grew up with a lot of ABCs (or immigrated while very young), and while their spoken Chinese (usually Cantonese) was very good (interacting with their families in Chinese etc, interpreting for parents etc), their reading/writing wasn't as good because their schooling was in English. Attending YY (even if their home language was Cantonese) would have helped with that (if it had been an option). So how do you deal with that as an ABC family?
Anonymous wrote:geez! she doesn't even have kids yet! why not buy a house where she is happy now? She could sell or rent it out later if she is in the minority of people that A) have children and B) can't find any decent school options in DC.
Anonymous wrote: Seriously, complaining about imperfect (yet already functional) Chinese of some students who have another decade to perfect their mastery of the language translates into... sour grapes.
Anonymous wrote: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.
+1. The bilingual charter schools are overrated anyway. Without immersion MS options, collectively, the little kids in them, whose language skills generally aren't being reinforced at home (almost the entire Yu Ying population as there's no Chinese community behind the school, vs. Oyster, supported by a Latino community), are likely to have a hard time hanging onto their "fluency." CH parents in particular tend to use YY and others to escape not-so-great neighborhood schools, not because they have a connection to the immersion language/culture, or a definite path to Intl Bacca in HS.
You're better off starting with a solid IB ES school and seeing if lottery luck at an immersion school works for you later. Can't agree more with the poster who suggested that. Housing prices are rising a lot faster than salaries - it can be difficult to afford to move after you already have a kid or two.