Buying?
Buying Strategies
Shopping for An Agent
Choosing A Neighborhood
Finding A Home
Negotiating The Contract
Closing
FAQs
Selling?
Financing?
Relocating?
Ask Your Own Question
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Should you have any questions regarding any of the issues covered in this article, feel free to
Ask Your Own Question
and we'll respond to you personally.
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Why is it smart to
size up the schools before buying a house?
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When
you buy a house, you also buy into the area schools. Why should schools
influence the home choice of even childless couples? Resale values.
Families will often spend thousands of dollars more for a home located in
a better school district.
Start
with statistics
Typically the best place to start is with research that relies
heavily on statistics like test scores, high school graduation and
college attendance rates, student-teacher ratios and spending per pupil.
This data can give a snapshot of the condition of a school or school
district over the recent past. Ask your real estate agent, informed
friends and school-finding services.
Visit,
walk-through, ask
If you have children and want to find out what the schools will be
like for them, you need to visit the schools and see how well they are
run, how ancient or modern are the buildings, and how well equipped they
are. Pay attention to class size and teacher workload and whether
enrichment courses are offered. You also need to talk to school staff to
see what problems exist or are looming ahead. Budget cuts, a demographic
shift in the area or local development that overwhelms schools with new
students -- all can change the quality of schools.
Decide
for yourself
Even if the schools are the best in the state, you should look for
what is best for your children. Some youngsters need a small, quiet
school where individual efforts are rewarded, others thrive in a large,
cosmopolitan atmosphere. Or your children may need personal attention to
help cope with special learning styles.
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