RMIB culture?

Anonymous
I keep hearing how RMIB is a “pressure cooker” or “toxic.” Can anyone shed light on the program culture and what elements in particular might be stressful or harmful? I take it that the kids are probably competitive to some degree. Is that fostered by administration/staff? Is it pervasive, or just a fraction of the cohort? Mean-spirited, driven by jealousy or comparison? Or just kids used to floating to the top and now working hard to stay there?

DC is efficient and bright and has a true love of learning but leans out on competition or ambition. (Leans in on collaboration and joy.) DC is nervous about the reputation, but on paper the program seems absolutely perfect for the kid. It’s been hard to gauge reality. Other main option is Einstein IB. Any insight helps!
Anonymous
Like any other life setting, you have the competitive people and the less competitive who go for joy. Your kid won't know how it is until they are there. Then you can switch out of the school if they don't like it.
Anonymous
My daughter graduated from RMIB in 2023. Yes, it's a lot of hard work, but she did not find it toxic at all. The administration is great, the program is great, and she has an amazing group of close and supportive friends who collaborated rather than competing with each other. If it were me, I'd take RMIB over Einstein for my kid.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:My daughter graduated from RMIB in 2023. Yes, it's a lot of hard work, but she did not find it toxic at all. The administration is great, the program is great, and she has an amazing group of close and supportive friends who collaborated rather than competing with each other. If it were me, I'd take RMIB over Einstein for my kid.

Same as my DD’s experience so far.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Like any other life setting, you have the competitive people and the less competitive who go for joy. Your kid won't know how it is until they are there. Then you can switch out of the school if they don't like it.

+1 My DC graduated in '23. There were some kids who were uber competitive; then there were others who were not. My DC was in the not competitive camp. They did really really well in the program.

It is what you make of it.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:My daughter graduated from RMIB in 2023. Yes, it's a lot of hard work, but she did not find it toxic at all. The administration is great, the program is great, and she has an amazing group of close and supportive friends who collaborated rather than competing with each other. If it were me, I'd take RMIB over Einstein for my kid.


Same. I have a junior in RMIB. Our home school is not Einstein, but another non-W high school that is similar to Einstein and also has an IB.

Idk if my kid just doesn’t talk about it, but they have not had any issues with hyper-competitive kids. My kid has found a supportive group of motivated, smart, hard-working, interesting kids/classmates/friends at RMIB. It is a lot of work, but not overwhelming if your kid is even remotely organized. And my kid is getting a solid HS education.
Anonymous
My DS has not found it to be hyper competitive. Heavy workload but nicely collaborative. We were hesitant because his experience at the Cold Spring magnet was very...different. Glad to be pleasantly surprised with RMIB.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:My DS has not found it to be hyper competitive. Heavy workload but nicely collaborative. We were hesitant because his experience at the Cold Spring magnet was very...different. Glad to be pleasantly surprised with RMIB.

That's because RMIB is made up of kids from all over, and not just W schools.
Anonymous
Not OP but wondering about the finding of a close knit group of friends. My DC is a freshman in RMIB and it doesn’t seem like there’s a lot of opportunities for friendships to start. It might be just too early or it might be just their own issue but I’m wondering if it gets better.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Not OP but wondering about the finding of a close knit group of friends. My DC is a freshman in RMIB and it doesn’t seem like there’s a lot of opportunities for friendships to start. It might be just too early or it might be just their own issue but I’m wondering if it gets better.

clubs.. someone once gave me the advice to have your kid be active and plugged in and join clubs. I told DC that, and DC made some good friends. They had no close friends in MS.

It's hard if your kid doesn't live in the RM cluster because the kids are from all over the county. My DC had friends all the way up in Germantown, and several locally in Rockville. They hardly saw the friend in Germantown. It got better Junior year when they all started to drive.

This is an issue for any magnet school. My kid had the same problem at HGC as it ws known then. Kid's friends were all over the county. Hard to meet up.
Anonymous
I have a senior. I’d say not at all toxic or cut-throat. Collaborative and supportive. Lots of work so they all joke about how little sleep they get, how much caffeine they consume, how far behind they are, etc—I guess that can be its own form of competition but they all generally recognize it’s tough so no judgment against kids who are behind or need a helping hand. I get the impression there are some kids who feel some parental pressure, but my kids sense is that it is way, way better than some other schools where parents put a lot of pressure on their kids. It’s a pretty diverse group which helps make it less of a pressure cooker.
Anonymous
I have a junior. She reports that the culture is fine. Kids are nice and she has made some good friends.

It is a lot of work, but kids seem to be fairly supportive of eachother.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Not OP but wondering about the finding of a close knit group of friends. My DC is a freshman in RMIB and it doesn’t seem like there’s a lot of opportunities for friendships to start. It might be just too early or it might be just their own issue but I’m wondering if it gets better.

clubs.. someone once gave me the advice to have your kid be active and plugged in and join clubs. I told DC that, and DC made some good friends. They had no close friends in MS.

It's hard if your kid doesn't live in the RM cluster because the kids are from all over the county. My DC had friends all the way up in Germantown, and several locally in Rockville. They hardly saw the friend in Germantown. It got better Junior year when they all started to drive.

This is an issue for any magnet school. My kid had the same problem at HGC as it ws known then. Kid's friends were all over the county. Hard to meet up.


I’m the PP you’re responding to. Mine has joined two clubs for that same reason. They’ve met only a couple of times this whole school year.
I’m surprised that HS clubs aren’t very active.
Anonymous
Have seen good support from counselors, teachers, IB coordinators, and students with my senior RMIB student. Workload has not prevented her from doing her extracurricular activities seriously, either.
Anonymous
The environment is not toxic or pressure cooker in and of itself, but it is one in which a perfectionist type can easily crack. The worst pressure/damage is self imposed, feeling like all your classmates are smarter, feeling like you need to do everything perfectly, etc.

The teachers have high standards for sure but they are great.
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