Cities with good schools

Oracle_IHB

New member
IR,



Apart from Irvine which city will you recommend for a family with elementary school going kids?

I am looking at best value city with good schools.



Thanks



Oracle
 
Head over to the schools thread under lifestyle (I think your post will be moved there anyway). There are a lot of discussions about schools there, just use the "search" button in the top right hand corner to see if there's any discussions about the schools and/or districts you are interested in.
 
[quote author="Oracle" date=1243295365]IR,



Apart from Irvine which city will you recommend for a family with elementary school going kids?

I am looking at best value city with good schools.



Thanks



Oracle</blockquote>


I think the whole "Irvine has good schools" thing is way overrated.



How do you define good schools? My opinion is that the most important thing in a school is high parent involvement. You find that in most middle/upper middle class neighborhoods. If you mean API scores or other measures like that you can find that info on greatschools.net. But I wouldn't use that for anything more than a datapoint. Plenty of high api schools are nothing special and in fact lack the qualitative factors that make a school good.



In the end, find an area you like. Chances are if you like the area, you'll be able to find a school you like. And unless the school is horribly low in scores, etc. you're far more important to you kid's education than the school anyway.
 
[quote author="not a realtor" date=1243295821][quote author="Oracle" date=1243295365]IR,



Apart from Irvine which city will you recommend for a family with elementary school going kids?

I am looking at best value city with good schools.



Thanks



Oracle</blockquote>


I think the whole "Irvine has good schools" thing is way overrated.



How do you define good schools? My opinion is that the most important thing in a school is high parent involvement. You find that in most middle/upper middle class neighborhoods. If you mean API scores or other measures like that you can find that info on greatschools.net. But I wouldn't use that for anything more than a datapoint. Plenty of high api schools are nothing special and in fact lack the qualitative factors that make a school good.



In the end, find an area you like. Chances are if you like the area, you'll be able to find a school you like. And unless the school is horribly low in scores, etc. you're far more important to you kid's education than the school anyway.</blockquote>


So you would buy a home where the elementary, middle and high school get in the low marks on greatschools.net? I wouldn't for three reasons:



1. The school is probably shitty if it only got a 3 or a 4 out of 10.



2. I can solve this problem by just buying a home where the schools are rated high.



3. Any potential buyers, when I am ready to sell, also won't want their kid going to a shitty school.



When I am looking for an area where I want to live - the first and utmost thing I look at is the school quality - where are the best schools? Once you find the best schools, everything else just falls into place.
 
Oracle,



Here's a list that hs_teacher posted recently about the various OC high schools:

<a href="http://www.irvinehousingblog.com/forums/viewreply/110744/">http://www.irvinehousingblog.com/forums/viewreply/110744/</a>



It should help get you started on researching alternatives to Irvine with good schools.
 
[quote author="gypsyuma" date=1243311105][quote author="not a realtor" date=1243295821][quote author="Oracle" date=1243295365]IR,



Apart from Irvine which city will you recommend for a family with elementary school going kids?

I am looking at best value city with good schools.



Thanks



Oracle</blockquote>


I think the whole "Irvine has good schools" thing is way overrated.



How do you define good schools? My opinion is that the most important thing in a school is high parent involvement. You find that in most middle/upper middle class neighborhoods. If you mean API scores or other measures like that you can find that info on greatschools.net. But I wouldn't use that for anything more than a datapoint. Plenty of high api schools are nothing special and in fact lack the qualitative factors that make a school good.



In the end, find an area you like. Chances are if you like the area, you'll be able to find a school you like. And unless the school is horribly low in scores, etc. you're far more important to you kid's education than the school anyway.</blockquote>


So you would buy a home where the elementary, middle and high school get in the low marks on greatschools.net? I wouldn't for three reasons:



1. The school is probably shitty if it only got a 3 or a 4 out of 10.



2. I can solve this problem by just buying a home where the schools are rated high.



3. Any potential buyers, when I am ready to sell, also won't want their kid going to a shitty school.



When I am looking for an area where I want to live - the first and utmost thing I look at is the school quality - where are the best schools? Once you find the best schools, everything else just falls into place.</blockquote>






I wouldn't buy a home where the schools are bad. But if a school gets a 7 or 8 on greatschools that doesn't necessarily mean it isn't as good as one that gets a 9. My point is that API scores are but one datapoint.
 
I would buy where there is an 8, but I would also use other means to determine the reputation of the schools in that area. The last home I bought the elementary was only a 9, but was considered one of the best in the city and with extensive parent involvement. I only use greatschools.net as a starting point in my research - mostly I go by reputation. All cities have certain areas where the schools are considered the best for that city. I just determine those areas and go from there. Because wherever the best schools are, you can pretty much find all the other things on your wishlist.
 
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