Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The academics are the same. The kids are different.
The kids aren’t even that different.
Yorktown is generally more rigorous. It’s racial demographics most closely match those of Arlington County overall. That said, WL is more racially diverse because it draws more students from less super-high income areas. Wakefield is probably the least diverse school in the county.
More Affluenza at Yorktown.
All schools are above average in terms of resources and curriculum. None of them are super feeders to ivies or anything like that but there are always a few acceptances, more recently from W-L.
Yorktown parents always like to tout this as if it's meaningful. Yorktown skews more white than the STUDENT population overall, which is the relevant metric.
Yorktown 65% White, 16% Hispanic, 11% low-income
W-L 44% white, 32% Hispanic, 23% low-income
Wakefield 26% white, 43% Hispanic, 19% Black, 32% low-income
Agree definitely more affluenza at Yorktown and it has a reputation of having more drug use (of course I know that goes on at all HSs)
I have no direct experience with Yorktown but went to a pretty universally high income HS myself and avoided Yorktown when we were house hunting for that reason. It contributed to a pretty toxic social culture. I like the greater SES diversity at W-L and my kids have friends across the spectrum.
Arlington doesn’t have a middle class, so it’s hardly a spectrum. It’s a tale of two cities.
Is it the same person who keeps posting this? It’s totally hilarious.
Yeah, its not like the county instituted housing study to address the missing middle.
https://www.arlingtonva.us/Government/Programs/Housing/Housing-Arlington/Tools/Missing-Middle
https://dcist.com/story/21/11/18/arlington-virginia-missing-middle-housing/
https://www.arlingtonmagazine.com/caught-in-the-middle/
What exactly is the plan here? Teachers and firefighters and nurses want to live in SFH too, so building a lot of townhouses and condos priced for middle income will lay fallow or end up as group homes.
The MIDDLE in missing middle is not Middle Class. It is mid-size dwellings between a condo and a SFH. These may also correlate with a middle price point, but could also be luxury townhomes over $1M.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The academics are the same. The kids are different.
The kids aren’t even that different.
Yorktown is generally more rigorous. It’s racial demographics most closely match those of Arlington County overall. That said, WL is more racially diverse because it draws more students from less super-high income areas. Wakefield is probably the least diverse school in the county.
More Affluenza at Yorktown.
All schools are above average in terms of resources and curriculum. None of them are super feeders to ivies or anything like that but there are always a few acceptances, more recently from W-L.
Yorktown parents always like to tout this as if it's meaningful. Yorktown skews more white than the STUDENT population overall, which is the relevant metric.
Yorktown 65% White, 16% Hispanic, 11% low-income
W-L 44% white, 32% Hispanic, 23% low-income
Wakefield 26% white, 43% Hispanic, 19% Black, 32% low-income
Agree definitely more affluenza at Yorktown and it has a reputation of having more drug use (of course I know that goes on at all HSs)
I have no direct experience with Yorktown but went to a pretty universally high income HS myself and avoided Yorktown when we were house hunting for that reason. It contributed to a pretty toxic social culture. I like the greater SES diversity at W-L and my kids have friends across the spectrum.
Arlington doesn’t have a middle class, so it’s hardly a spectrum. It’s a tale of two cities.
Is it the same person who keeps posting this? It’s totally hilarious.
Yeah, its not like the county instituted housing study to address the missing middle.
https://www.arlingtonva.us/Government/Programs/Housing/Housing-Arlington/Tools/Missing-Middle
https://dcist.com/story/21/11/18/arlington-virginia-missing-middle-housing/
https://www.arlingtonmagazine.com/caught-in-the-middle/
What exactly is the plan here? Teachers and firefighters and nurses want to live in SFH too, so building a lot of townhouses and condos priced for middle income will lay fallow or end up as group homes.
Anonymous wrote:
What? We can't afford to go private. That is really not an answer.
What do you mean "sharing a locker"? To be honest that would be awful, that's hardly a non-issue.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not sure if this has already been mentioned but something to consider - I heard certain colleges will expect you to have taken the highest level classes offered at your school. So if your child wants to do AP, but not IB, Yorktown might be the better option, if that is something that's going to be important down the line.
Is IB considered higher level than AP?
By colleges, yes.
Wrong.
https://admission.virginia.edu/node/356#:~:text=We%20do%20not%20have%20a,the%20type%20of%20curriculum%20available.
I don't disagree or agree with you; but that's one university.
I do think IB is gaining respect and recognition among US colleges and universities, though.
Anonymous wrote:OP - It sounds like you may be happier in private. The differences are negligible between the two and, like others said, where your kid ends up for college is much more about your individual kid than some crazy list people can't figure out how to not copy a million times in replies. We had friends who always said they wanted the local school and then would visit and decide that there was something that would make their kid too uncomfortable (like sharing a locker or some other non-issue). It was clear they were really looking for any excuse not to go with the local school (and that's OK), but needed to "visit" so they could feel good about their decision. Frankly, their kid would have been fine at the local school, but they really wanted to go with private, but had some weird guilt complex about it.
Buy the house you like and don't worry about the school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My 8th grader says AP World history is an option next year at W&L, or so they have been told.
But does it conflict with IB requirements
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not sure if this has already been mentioned but something to consider - I heard certain colleges will expect you to have taken the highest level classes offered at your school. So if your child wants to do AP, but not IB, Yorktown might be the better option, if that is something that's going to be important down the line.
Is IB considered higher level than AP?
By colleges, yes.
Wrong.
https://admission.virginia.edu/node/356#:~:text=We%20do%20not%20have%20a,the%20type%20of%20curriculum%20available.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Same ranking as previous post, but including DC and MD
Sadly Wakefield doesn't even appear on the list ...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not sure if this has already been mentioned but something to consider - I heard certain colleges will expect you to have taken the highest level classes offered at your school. So if your child wants to do AP, but not IB, Yorktown might be the better option, if that is something that's going to be important down the line.
Is IB considered higher level than AP?
By colleges, yes.
Anonymous wrote:I don't know about YHS; but WHS freshmen can take AP World History. That's not an option at WL; but they, I believe, have a more coordinated intensified English-History curriculum instead.
I can't speak to the current situation, but my kid (now a senior at W-L doing the full IB program), took AP World History as a freshman, along with plenty of other kids. (I think there were at least 3 classes of 9th graders taking the class). In addition to his IB classes, my kid has taken 5 AP classes, plus a dual-enrollment math class). So while the IB program does fill up the schedule junior and senior years, with some planning it is possible to take advantage of the other advanced academic options.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Here is another data point for you, which might or might not be relevant.
average %of seniors accepted into Harvard, Princeton, and MIT from 2015-2020
Right so this just confirms neither school is a feeder to these elite schools.
Anonymous wrote:My 8th grader says AP World history is an option next year at W&L, or so they have been told.
Anonymous wrote:Same ranking as previous post, but including DC and MD