| There's just a natural overlap between people willing to spend $35k+ on private school and people who join country clubs. I don't know if you could find a pricey high school that doesn't have some country club people. |
Columbia? Makes sense as it's the catholic CC. |
Madeira has no country club scene. We have an upperclassman there and belong to a club. I’ve never heard anyone discussing their club, there have never been social events there, and I have never seen anyone from Madeira at our club (though I barely use it). Between the boarding element and the merit and financial aid, it feels less wealthy than the K-8 we came from and certainly not a country club type of school. |
This. I also think there's no way to make a blanket statement about a school. You are going to find some classes/cohorts that are more heavily CC families and others that are not at most if not all of the area girls' schools. |
| NCS has plenty of CC families (the Chevy families aren’t shy about their status) but also plenty of families who are not. Easy to find friends who are not in that group. |
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I have a child at a private HS and we are members of a CC. I am aware that there are other families who are also cc members but it rarely comes up in conversation nor is there a "dynamic". While some people might place importance on the optics of being part of a private school and country club community, it’s not something that always defines social interactions or dictates a dynamic.
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Whether or not it comes up in conversation, if that's where your daughter and CC friends spend their summers, it creates a dynamic |
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We are at SR and belong to a CC. By HS, especially by 11th grade, the kids do not hang out there. Even at the pool in summer for most part. And when they do, all friends go even if not a member.
Or are you talking about where parents hang out? |
| Our family isn't a CC member but we practically are because DD's best friend's family is, and DD's best friend's mom and I are really good friends, so we're there all the time. It's great! |
The bolded above is false. They belong. Probably to more than one. You do not just know about it. At our private I think almost 60-70% of the kids' families belong to area ccs. Whether it is a scene not is another story. I don't think girls hand out at cc's as much by High School. Just too much else to do. |
Only 3 girls left for Stone Ridge. That is not many girls to leave a school. But I agree NCS does not have an overall country club vibe despite many people being wealthy. Better vibe overall than some of the other schools in our experience. |
Give a rest seriously. This is not just true. We have a daughter at NCS and many very social athletic girls at the school. They are socializing with STA and other schools all of the time. |
Or you could not belong to a club and still have friends in that group. It has a good balance at NCS in our experience. |
Hmm my daughter is quite social and at NCS. She and friends are having quite a fun highschool experience while maintaining good grades and being involved in their school. They get invited to all sorts of events at STA and many other schools in the area. Her two friends that left for other schools are very vocal Trump supporters and belong to CCC so I think other schools were better fits for them. |
I also went to one of the area's top schools (for hs) and sure, there were girls in CCs, but it wasn't a big deal. My friend group had a few people that were members at different ones, but the majority were not. Our entire group would go to a few activities and Sweet 16s at the clubs, but that was about it. Senior year, when we were allowed to leave campus during free periods, some people in a different group would go to their club for lunch. We really didn't think anything of it... the bagel place down the street was a tastier sounding option to us anyway. |