Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
NP, these technicalities are meaningless. The point is, there is a diversity of schools upcounty with great schools like Quince Orchard, Northwest and Clarksburg. There are also not so great schools like Seneca, and Watkins Mill. The question is what will spring forth from the coming Seneca expansion. The schools zoned for Seneca could become more desirable if there is an improvement in the quality of schools.
I am wondering what you mean, when you talk about "quality of schools".
Seneca Valley HS will have a new building. The old building was in terrible shape, so the new building will be a big improvement. Is that what you're talking about?
Or are you talking about the rezoning? In that case, you're not talking about the quality of the school, you're talking about the demographics of the student population.
I'm talking about both. Not sure why we have to play these "quality of school" games all the time. The current building is atrocious and hopefully the revitalized campus will bring it new life. Likewise, it will probably pull from more economically well off populations which should improve educational climate.
Ah, so you define a good school as a school with a high proportion of students from economically well-off families. In other words, the richer the student body, the better the school.
Not everybody agrees with this definition.
Anonymous wrote:
It doesn't matter if they do or not but that will largely determine home values. I actually would agree that this does not have to determine the quality of the school but since we are in Moco, where all curriculum is the same unless you have a critical mass of high performing students then that makes higher performing/higher income relevant.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
NP, these technicalities are meaningless. The point is, there is a diversity of schools upcounty with great schools like Quince Orchard, Northwest and Clarksburg. There are also not so great schools like Seneca, and Watkins Mill. The question is what will spring forth from the coming Seneca expansion. The schools zoned for Seneca could become more desirable if there is an improvement in the quality of schools.
I am wondering what you mean, when you talk about "quality of schools".
Seneca Valley HS will have a new building. The old building was in terrible shape, so the new building will be a big improvement. Is that what you're talking about?
Or are you talking about the rezoning? In that case, you're not talking about the quality of the school, you're talking about the demographics of the student population.
I'm talking about both. Not sure why we have to play these "quality of school" games all the time. The current building is atrocious and hopefully the revitalized campus will bring it new life. Likewise, it will probably pull from more economically well off populations which should improve educational climate.
Ah, so you define a good school as a school with a high proportion of students from economically well-off families. In other words, the richer the student body, the better the school.
Not everybody agrees with this definition.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
NP, these technicalities are meaningless. The point is, there is a diversity of schools upcounty with great schools like Quince Orchard, Northwest and Clarksburg. There are also not so great schools like Seneca, and Watkins Mill. The question is what will spring forth from the coming Seneca expansion. The schools zoned for Seneca could become more desirable if there is an improvement in the quality of schools.
I am wondering what you mean, when you talk about "quality of schools".
Seneca Valley HS will have a new building. The old building was in terrible shape, so the new building will be a big improvement. Is that what you're talking about?
Or are you talking about the rezoning? In that case, you're not talking about the quality of the school, you're talking about the demographics of the student population.
I'm talking about both. Not sure why we have to play these "quality of school" games all the time. The current building is atrocious and hopefully the revitalized campus will bring it new life. Likewise, it will probably pull from more economically well off populations which should improve educational climate.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
NP, these technicalities are meaningless. The point is, there is a diversity of schools upcounty with great schools like Quince Orchard, Northwest and Clarksburg. There are also not so great schools like Seneca, and Watkins Mill. The question is what will spring forth from the coming Seneca expansion. The schools zoned for Seneca could become more desirable if there is an improvement in the quality of schools.
I am wondering what you mean, when you talk about "quality of schools".
Seneca Valley HS will have a new building. The old building was in terrible shape, so the new building will be a big improvement. Is that what you're talking about?
Or are you talking about the rezoning? In that case, you're not talking about the quality of the school, you're talking about the demographics of the student population.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
NP, these technicalities are meaningless. The point is, there is a diversity of schools upcounty with great schools like Quince Orchard, Northwest and Clarksburg. There are also not so great schools like Seneca, and Watkins Mill. The question is what will spring forth from the coming Seneca expansion. The schools zoned for Seneca could become more desirable if there is an improvement in the quality of schools.
I am wondering what you mean, when you talk about "quality of schools".
Seneca Valley HS will have a new building. The old building was in terrible shape, so the new building will be a big improvement. Is that what you're talking about?
Or are you talking about the rezoning? In that case, you're not talking about the quality of the school, you're talking about the demographics of the student population.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
It is for the purposes of schooling. We can pretend all we want or play games with words but Boyd’s/ Germantown are one in th3 same
No, they are not one and the same. Boyds is zoned for the Clarksburg cluster.
Park of Boyds goes to NW.
No, part of Germantown goes to Northwest.
Most of Boyds goes to Clarksburg, but some of Boyds goes to Poolesville.
Autumn Gold RD, Boyds, MD 20841 goes to NW
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
It is for the purposes of schooling. We can pretend all we want or play games with words but Boyd’s/ Germantown are one in th3 same
No, they are not one and the same. Boyds is zoned for the Clarksburg cluster.
Park of Boyds goes to NW.
No, part of Germantown goes to Northwest.
Most of Boyds goes to Clarksburg, but some of Boyds goes to Poolesville.
Anonymous wrote:
NP, these technicalities are meaningless. The point is, there is a diversity of schools upcounty with great schools like Quince Orchard, Northwest and Clarksburg. There are also not so great schools like Seneca, and Watkins Mill. The question is what will spring forth from the coming Seneca expansion. The schools zoned for Seneca could become more desirable if there is an improvement in the quality of schools.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:then why does the vistas have a boyds zip and mailing address...and zoned to nw ? its boydsAnonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I never New Shoppers was the focus of Germantown.".. There is town center, milestone, Boyd’s, etc. wouldnt live near shoppers...
Boyds is not a part of Germantown. There is a part of Germantown that has a Boyds zip code, but it is Germantown.
If you don't want to live near Shoppers, then you don't have to.
It is for the purposes of schooling. We can pretend all we want or play games with words but Boyd’s/ Germantown are one in th3 same
No, they are not one and the same. Boyds is zoned for the Clarksburg cluster.
It has a Boyds zip code because they needed to assign some routes to the Boyds post office so that the USPS wouldn't close the Boyds post office. (Which they will probably end up doing anyway.) But it's not Boyds, it's Germantown. If you get your water and sewer through WSSC, you live in Germantown.
Anonymous wrote:
It has a Boyds zip code because they needed to assign some routes to the Boyds post office so that the USPS wouldn't close the Boyds post office. (Which they will probably end up doing anyway.) But it's not Boyds, it's Germantown. If you get your water and sewer through WSSC, you live in Germantown.
Anonymous wrote:then why does the vistas have a boyds zip and mailing address...and zoned to nw ? its boydsAnonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I never New Shoppers was the focus of Germantown.".. There is town center, milestone, Boyd’s, etc. wouldnt live near shoppers...
Boyds is not a part of Germantown. There is a part of Germantown that has a Boyds zip code, but it is Germantown.
If you don't want to live near Shoppers, then you don't have to.
It is for the purposes of schooling. We can pretend all we want or play games with words but Boyd’s/ Germantown are one in th3 same
No, they are not one and the same. Boyds is zoned for the Clarksburg cluster.
then why does the vistas have a boyds zip and mailing address...and zoned to nw ? its boydsAnonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I never New Shoppers was the focus of Germantown.".. There is town center, milestone, Boyd’s, etc. wouldnt live near shoppers...
Boyds is not a part of Germantown. There is a part of Germantown that has a Boyds zip code, but it is Germantown.
If you don't want to live near Shoppers, then you don't have to.
It is for the purposes of schooling. We can pretend all we want or play games with words but Boyd’s/ Germantown are one in th3 same
No, they are not one and the same. Boyds is zoned for the Clarksburg cluster.