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DC Private Schools

The phrase "private school" covers at least four different decisions in Washington, DC. For some it's academic outcomes and college lists. For others the draw is faith, philosophy, or scale. Start with the selective independent tier. Sidwell Friends runs on a Quaker philosophy that has educated presidents' children for generations. Georgetown Day School takes the progressive coed lane, founded as DC's first integrated school. Catholic education runs on entirely different economics. Blessed Sacrament and St. Anthony Catholic School show what parish education offers: solid academics, community, modest tuition, and demand for Catholic high schools in DC stays correspondingly high. Georgetown Visitation, educating girls since 1799, is the historic flagship. Method-driven schools make up their own category. Aidan Montessori leads the city's Montessori tradition with child-directed classrooms. The classical option is Washington Latin, where the curriculum reac...

School Bus Guide

Twenty-six million American kids board a school bus every single school day. Yet ask a simple question — how long is a school bus, or how many seats does it hold — and most adults guess wrong. The answers depend on type. Type A minibuses run 20-25 feet and seat 12-30 students. Type C, the conventional yellow bus, runs about 38 feet and holds 72 students. Type D flat-fronts max out at roughly 90 riders. The color has been federally standard since 1939. There's a real economy built on these buses. School bus rental is a standard service for field trips, weddings, and events. The used bus market serves skoolie builders and budget operators alike, with prices ranging from a few thousand dollars for high-mileage units to much more for late models. The driver's seat requires real credentials. School bus driver training covers the CDL Class B, both endorsements, and federal background screening. Districts nationwide run paid training programs amid a chronic driver shortage. Sa...

The case for arriving a day early

 Every good trip I have taken started with one wasted day. Not wasted, really — a day with no plan, where I just walk a neighbourhood and let it bore me a little. That first slow day is where a place stops being a list of sights and starts being somewhere I have actually been. I no longer book tours for the first morning. I book nothing. I get coffee, I sit, I watch. The trip is better for it every single time.

Why I started keeping a travel notebook

 I used to think a trip only counted if it was photographed. These days I carry a small notebook instead. I write down the name of the café, the street I got lost on, what the light looked like at four in the afternoon. It turns out the notes outlast the photos. A picture shows me where I stood; a sentence shows me what I felt. If you have never tried it, take a cheap notebook on your next trip and write three lines a day. You will be surprised what you keep.