Ranking privates academic rigor

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Please stop trying to rank schools. It's meaningless.


My son’s highly ranked second best all-boys school in DC has not been better than private apart from smaller class size. Academics not better, clubs and opportunities not better, writing curicullum is worse.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:i appreciated this more when you wanted your child crushed by college.


Well I didn’t want to say it, but I do want her taken down a notch in high school. It’s a big world and she needs to know it.

I came from a small town, local “whiz kid” and my elite college destroyed me that I think my life would have been better at my state public university. Being on your own and failing at everything when everyone seems to find it so easy, not a good place.


I’ll be the one to say it 😬

Feels like you may have some unresolved issues.

Don’t thrust those onto your own kids.



Hah I do. But my kid is full teenager and so arrogant about how smart they are. It drives me nuts. I mean, maybe she is really brilliant and hard working? But I want to test her mettle before she has to head out on her own. Her MS experience has not done that.



OP is either a troll or a major A$$HOLE.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Please stop trying to rank schools. It's meaningless.


My son’s highly ranked second best all-boys school in DC has not been better than private apart from smaller class size. Academics not better, clubs and opportunities not better, writing curicullum is worse.


So you’re back again not missing a chance to grind your axe against “the second best all-boys school in DC”? OP clearly has a daughter, since they mentioned Madeira and Holton. So all-boys schools are not relevant. Go grind your axe someplace else today. It is super easy not to renew your contract, and if you think your private is better, you don’t even have to apply out. So win-win-win.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:i appreciated this more when you wanted your child crushed by college.

Lol

Better to crush yourself in HS…. Yeah..
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Please stop trying to rank schools. It's meaningless.


My son’s highly ranked second best all-boys school in DC has not been better than private apart from smaller class size. Academics not better, clubs and opportunities not better, writing curicullum is worse.


So that school would not be on OP’s daughter’s list?
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Please stop trying to rank schools. It's meaningless.


My son’s highly ranked second best all-boys school in DC has not been better than private apart from smaller class size. Academics not better, clubs and opportunities not better, writing curicullum is worse.


I’ve read this like five times and literally can’t follow. Would someone please translate what is meant by the “second best all boys school….that has not been better than private…” So it is or is not a private? Why can’t I follow?
Anonymous
If you want your daughter to be crushed by competition in HS, you should have had her apply to the top magnet schools in MD or VA. Even a top high school like Whitman - the top 10% of kids who are competing for Ivy admissions are cut-throat competitive. It is more of a sink or swim environment.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:From what I know…. Through both personal experience at 3 of these schools and good friends at the others…..

GDS/Sidwell
Potomac
Maret/ Holton

Can’t comment on the others




I think most can agree with this, though I've heard somewhat mixed things about Maret lately.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:If you want your daughter to be crushed by competition in HS, you should have had her apply to the top magnet schools in MD or VA. Even a top high school like Whitman - the top 10% of kids who are competing for Ivy admissions are cut-throat competitive. It is more of a sink or swim environment.


+1
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:If you want your daughter to be crushed by competition in HS, you should have had her apply to the top magnet schools in MD or VA. Even a top high school like Whitman - the top 10% of kids who are competing for Ivy admissions are cut-throat competitive. It is more of a sink or swim environment.


+1


This is very true.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Please stop trying to rank schools. It's meaningless.


My son’s highly ranked second best all-boys school in DC has not been better than private apart from smaller class size. Academics not better, clubs and opportunities not better, writing curicullum is worse.


I’ve read this like five times and literally can’t follow. Would someone please translate what is meant by the “second best all boys school….that has not been better than private…” So it is or is not a private? Why can’t I follow?


PP has hijacked several threads with beefs against a certain private all-boys school in DC (not STA or Gonzaga, so you do the math). PP must search for the school initials or name or the word “rigor” every 30 minutes or so because the negative posts appear like clockwork, even on irrelevant threads like this one. PP never foregoes an opportunity to shout from the mountaintops how severely mediocre they think it is.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Well, I'll offer an experience. DD is about to graduate Madeira, and chose it over NCS and a couple of others.

It's not "coddling", but it is designed to not be a pressure cooker. They will push the kids as much as they can handle, but not to the breaking point. It's an individual thing (DD is pushed to the edge of her capability) rather than a collective thing where girls are played against one another.

They engender teamwork more than competition. An example: the graduation speaker isn't based on academic rank; it's a girl chosen by her peers based on an audition process.

In our experience this yields exceptionally self-aware and confident young women who have been in the workplace (successfully) several times in the last few years through the co-curricullum process. It may not be seen by those here (who tend to be very much flag-wavers) as being as rigorous as some others, but it is much more predictably lower pressure and less cut-throat.

There's remarkably little drama and bullying, and there's virtually no mean-girl vibe. Indeed, they encourage each other: during the recent musical, for example, girls cheered their peers who were changing the set between scenes.

DD has been accepted at one of her top-3 choices already. I believe she is exceptionally well prepared not only for college, but for life.


Love reading this. Had the best vibe yesterday at admitted students day.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:If you want your daughter to be crushed by competition in HS, you should have had her apply to the top magnet schools in MD or VA. Even a top high school like Whitman - the top 10% of kids who are competing for Ivy admissions are cut-throat competitive. It is more of a sink or swim environment.


We are Asian, didn’t even bother try to apply because of current admission upheaval. But yes those would have been amazing options.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:From what I know…. Through both personal experience at 3 of these schools and good friends at the others…..

GDS/Sidwell
Potomac
Maret/ Holton

Can’t comment on the others




I think most can agree with this, though I've heard somewhat mixed things about Maret lately.

No, no one would agree with this. No ranking would put Potomac ahead of Holton.
You too must be Potomac parents.

-No affiliation whatsoever with Holton
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:If you want your daughter to be crushed by competition in HS, you should have had her apply to the top magnet schools in MD or VA. Even a top high school like Whitman - the top 10% of kids who are competing for Ivy admissions are cut-throat competitive. It is more of a sink or swim environment.


We are Asian, didn’t even bother try to apply because of current admission upheaval. But yes those would have been amazing options.

A big push for Asians at the magnates these days
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