Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
This is a good point. The schools that have FARMS in the 30%-40% FARMS (or 50% ever been on FARMS) are also likely to grow in poverty even faster. I doubt that Poolesville or Damascus will grow that quickly because the high density low income housing just doesn't exist out there to support the surge in FARMS that you are seeing in Silver Spring, Gaithersburg and Germantown. MCPS will start trying to bus kids from Gaithersburg and Germantown into QO, NW, and Wootton and this will kill those skills. Silver Spring is already a lost cause with poverty already taking over those schools. No idea about Sherwood but I would guess that it get caught up the MCPS bussing plans too.
Snort.
Yeah
OP, don't listen to this. Because real estate values are going up, there are many areas in silver spring and Wheaton that are improving. You may have to take a chance on a school pyramid that is less than you want, but we also are in the under 500k club, and it's fine.
Yes, it's just the usual fact-free fear mongering. The actual MCPS data shows SS schools like Blair are stable and have experienced about 1% variance over the past decade.
That’s funny because Blair was mostly white and all middle class a short generation ago, doesn’t appear to be a stable trend line to but maybe that trend is your stable.
And Georgetown was a ghetto a few decades back too. Things are always changing. Nevertheless, over the past 10 years, the FARMS rate has varied within 1%.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
This is a good point. The schools that have FARMS in the 30%-40% FARMS (or 50% ever been on FARMS) are also likely to grow in poverty even faster. I doubt that Poolesville or Damascus will grow that quickly because the high density low income housing just doesn't exist out there to support the surge in FARMS that you are seeing in Silver Spring, Gaithersburg and Germantown. MCPS will start trying to bus kids from Gaithersburg and Germantown into QO, NW, and Wootton and this will kill those skills. Silver Spring is already a lost cause with poverty already taking over those schools. No idea about Sherwood but I would guess that it get caught up the MCPS bussing plans too.
Snort.
Yeah
OP, don't listen to this. Because real estate values are going up, there are many areas in silver spring and Wheaton that are improving. You may have to take a chance on a school pyramid that is less than you want, but we also are in the under 500k club, and it's fine.
Yes, it's just the usual fact-free fear mongering. The actual MCPS data shows SS schools like Blair are stable and have experienced about 1% variance over the past decade.
That’s funny because Blair was mostly white and all middle class a short generation ago, doesn’t appear to be a stable trend line to but maybe that trend is your stable.
And Georgetown was a ghetto a few decades back too. Things are always changing. Nevertheless, over the past 10 years, the FARMS rate has varied within 1%.
Anonymous wrote:The trend that has been going on for the past 20 years is people no longer want to live in the outer burbs. Places like North Bethesda (aka Rockville) and Potomac are flat. The close-in areas; however, are going great.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
This is a good point. The schools that have FARMS in the 30%-40% FARMS (or 50% ever been on FARMS) are also likely to grow in poverty even faster. I doubt that Poolesville or Damascus will grow that quickly because the high density low income housing just doesn't exist out there to support the surge in FARMS that you are seeing in Silver Spring, Gaithersburg and Germantown. MCPS will start trying to bus kids from Gaithersburg and Germantown into QO, NW, and Wootton and this will kill those skills. Silver Spring is already a lost cause with poverty already taking over those schools. No idea about Sherwood but I would guess that it get caught up the MCPS bussing plans too.
Snort.
Yeah
OP, don't listen to this. Because real estate values are going up, there are many areas in silver spring and Wheaton that are improving. You may have to take a chance on a school pyramid that is less than you want, but we also are in the under 500k club, and it's fine.
Yes, it's just the usual fact-free fear mongering. The actual MCPS data shows SS schools like Blair are stable and have experienced about 1% variance over the past decade.
That’s funny because Blair was mostly white and all middle class a short generation ago, doesn’t appear to be a stable trend line to but maybe that trend is your stable.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
This is a good point. The schools that have FARMS in the 30%-40% FARMS (or 50% ever been on FARMS) are also likely to grow in poverty even faster. I doubt that Poolesville or Damascus will grow that quickly because the high density low income housing just doesn't exist out there to support the surge in FARMS that you are seeing in Silver Spring, Gaithersburg and Germantown. MCPS will start trying to bus kids from Gaithersburg and Germantown into QO, NW, and Wootton and this will kill those skills. Silver Spring is already a lost cause with poverty already taking over those schools. No idea about Sherwood but I would guess that it get caught up the MCPS bussing plans too.
Snort.
Yeah
OP, don't listen to this. Because real estate values are going up, there are many areas in silver spring and Wheaton that are improving. You may have to take a chance on a school pyramid that is less than you want, but we also are in the under 500k club, and it's fine.
Yes, it's just the usual fact-free fear mongering. The actual MCPS data shows SS schools like Blair are stable and have experienced about 1% variance over the past decade.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
This is a good point. The schools that have FARMS in the 30%-40% FARMS (or 50% ever been on FARMS) are also likely to grow in poverty even faster. I doubt that Poolesville or Damascus will grow that quickly because the high density low income housing just doesn't exist out there to support the surge in FARMS that you are seeing in Silver Spring, Gaithersburg and Germantown. MCPS will start trying to bus kids from Gaithersburg and Germantown into QO, NW, and Wootton and this will kill those skills. Silver Spring is already a lost cause with poverty already taking over those schools. No idea about Sherwood but I would guess that it get caught up the MCPS bussing plans too.
Snort.
Yeah
OP, don't listen to this. Because real estate values are going up, there are many areas in silver spring and Wheaton that are improving. You may have to take a chance on a school pyramid that is less than you want, but we also are in the under 500k club, and it's fine.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
This is a good point. The schools that have FARMS in the 30%-40% FARMS (or 50% ever been on FARMS) are also likely to grow in poverty even faster. I doubt that Poolesville or Damascus will grow that quickly because the high density low income housing just doesn't exist out there to support the surge in FARMS that you are seeing in Silver Spring, Gaithersburg and Germantown. MCPS will start trying to bus kids from Gaithersburg and Germantown into QO, NW, and Wootton and this will kill those skills. Silver Spring is already a lost cause with poverty already taking over those schools. No idea about Sherwood but I would guess that it get caught up the MCPS bussing plans too.
Snort.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
This is a good point. The schools that have FARMS in the 30%-40% FARMS (or 50% ever been on FARMS) are also likely to grow in poverty even faster. I doubt that Poolesville or Damascus will grow that quickly because the high density low income housing just doesn't exist out there to support the surge in FARMS that you are seeing in Silver Spring, Gaithersburg and Germantown. MCPS will start trying to bus kids from Gaithersburg and Germantown into QO, NW, and Wootton and this will kill those skills. Silver Spring is already a lost cause with poverty already taking over those schools. No idea about Sherwood but I would guess that it get caught up the MCPS bussing plans too.
Snort.
Anonymous wrote:
This is a good point. The schools that have FARMS in the 30%-40% FARMS (or 50% ever been on FARMS) are also likely to grow in poverty even faster. I doubt that Poolesville or Damascus will grow that quickly because the high density low income housing just doesn't exist out there to support the surge in FARMS that you are seeing in Silver Spring, Gaithersburg and Germantown. MCPS will start trying to bus kids from Gaithersburg and Germantown into QO, NW, and Wootton and this will kill those skills. Silver Spring is already a lost cause with poverty already taking over those schools. No idea about Sherwood but I would guess that it get caught up the MCPS bussing plans too.
Anonymous wrote:
Here are your non-W schools with lower than 30% Farms. There are others that are not far over 30%, but, FARMS have steadily risen since the early 2000s, they are not getting lower!
I included Wootton because maybe you'll find a unicorn. I think your budget is tough period. You'll have to compromise.
Clarksburg (26%)
Damascus (14%)
Richard Montgomery (19%)
Northwest HS (22%)
Poolesville (6%)
Quince Orchard (21.3%)
Sherwood (15%)
Wootton (less than 5%)
Out of curiosity, I looked at FARMS rates back in 2002. Wheaton was the only highschool with over 30% FARMS at 38.4%. 18 out of 26 (69%) of our highschools are over 30% Farms with some being more than 50%. The school system is done. Buyer beware.
Here is the dashboard with data.
https://www.montgomeryschoolsmd.org/departments/sharedaccountability/glance/
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
+1. It is a very short drive to a lot of things. Lots of people end up a 5-10 drive to things rather than a 5-20 minute walk because it expands options considerably and generally will be less expensive. People at all budgets make this trade off, but particularly at OP's budget it makes a lot of sense to do so.
That trade-off really gets you once the kids are middle-school and especially high-school age, though. Old enough to get themselves places, if they CAN get themselves places - which they can't, if the only good way to get themselves there is by car.