This gets to exactly the point I was trying to make. "Many of them" will be. Which makes complete sense. The question is, what does many mean exactly? 90 percent of the Beauvoir grads? 75 percent? 50 percent? Or less? |
| +1000 |
| Ah my +1000 not for you pp |
+ 1000 |
Agree. All of the Beauvoir kids I know at NCS and STA are going to amazing colleges. Colleges most kids dream of being accepted to. |
I rather go to public. |
I agree. |
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It seems like every year 5 or more girls apply to Sidwell. Usually only 1 or 2 are accepted Because spaces are very limited. If the parents of these kids don’t want their daughters to go to NCS why do they start at Bvr? I am
Not being critical I just don’t understand the thinking |
Many parents love the early childhood learning approach at Beauvoir. They may not, however, want to send their girls to a single sex school. For those parents, Sidwell and GDS are the preferred schools, as they are considered the two others of the Big 3. |
When you enter the school at age 4, you might find your child at age 9 is best-suited for a different environment than you initially expected. That happens. And it’s totally sensible at that point to consider alternatives. |
Actually, the majority of kids at STA are not Beauvoir kids. That's true in the lower school but by about 7th grade, it's probably about 50/50 and by 9th grade Beauvoir kids are probably 30-40% of the class (class size is about 85 and about 30-32 Beauvoir kids move on to STA in 4th grade). Anyone who thinks STA is only looking at academic achievement when selecting students for 9th grade admissions is deluding themselves. The school fills in plenty of perceived needs in 9th grade, including sports, arts and, yes, academics. Some Beauvoir kids do fine academically and some do not. Some are elected prefects and some are not. Some are stars on the fields and some are not. Oh, and you can replace the word "Beauvoir" with "a student admitted in 6th/7th/9th grade". Anyone who spouts broad generalizations about this reveals their own ignorance - and that's true either way. Beauvoir kids are not disproportionately well represented at the top or the bottom of the class every year. It varies, as one would expect. This entire thread is just howling at the moon. STA will take Beauvoir kids. That's the way the schools are set up. Expecting STA to do otherwise is silly. |
You’re calculating STA’s composition class by class. Take the school as a whole, and you still have more Beauvoir kids than non-Beauvoir kids at STA. We can dispute until kingdom come, but anyone who is actually at STA will tell you that you don’t get in at 9th without the grades and test scores. Yes, it helps if you have something else to offer, and you’re more likely to get in. However, a B+ student with greact ECs is not likely to be admitted. Beauvoir kids are disproportionately represented at the top. Again, we can argue, but take a look at the record over any length of time, and it will be clear. Yes, there are some years when there’s a weak Beauvoir class, but generally they are disproportionately represented at the top. |
This is true. Mind you, Beauvoir is not easy to get into. I know many many children with 99.5% plus WPPSIbscores that did not get in. Getting into Beauvoir alone usually requires high scores so you’re starting already with a pool of kids that have high intelligence and scores. |
| PK and K is about parents and ability to pay for the longterm |
| That’s just not true. I know lots of incredibly wealthy parents whose kids did not get into Beauvoir. All the DC private schools are just incredibly competitive and you have a ton of really smart kids. |