I never thought I’d see the day when African-Americans excelled on a basketball team. DEI efforts are worth it |
Why do you even bother to post? |
PP writing. I enjoy the basketball program. I'm not making any kind of veiled statement on race. What I am calling attention to is the school's social media presence/campaigning and all the other PR the school puts out. There is a clear interest in going beyond (or substituting for) the school's historically academic identity to one more focused on sports. And maybe that's just the direction Bryan seeks to take things. This is disappointing to me. I sometimes wonder if the money crunch the school seems to have experienced during recent years may explain some of this. In fundraising circles, it is widely believed that alumni tend to be more generous when sports teams are excelling than in any other situation. |
Don’t blame Sidwell because your child lacks any athletic ability. Besides, being an an academic AND athletic powerhouse is not mutually exclusive (see Stanford, Duke, UCLA, etc). |
| Aside from basketball, though, Sidwell isn’t really a sports powerhouse in the more high profile sports. Football program couldn’t even field a team to play MAC games for goodness sakes. Lacrosse is terrible. I guess Tennis is pretty good and sometimes soccer? |
| As a HS parent - we have heard that the MS head is subpar and that it affects much of MS experience in a negative way for students and for teachers. |
Sidwell’s tennis program is excellent, and soccer is currently good. |
I mean has any other than a parent ever attended a high school tennis match? Great for the kids on the team, but not exactly a high school glamour sport |
So have I and I think this is completely off base. No idea what you’re talking about |
| I love it when people say “ so sad “. It like listening to Trump. |
It’s all great. You’ll be dissatisfied anywhere |
+1 Mens sana in corpore sano |
🙄 |
Could not agree more with what you have heard. |
You clowns missed the point. The complaint is about what the school emphasizes as it identity. Not that the school has an excellent team or two. (One of which has featured my kid as a player for the past two year). |