I agree that unless you have children at different schools it's hard to evaluate which schools are "woke" (I mean aren't all schools embracing DEI to some extent?) and which ones fit with what your family teaches. Go to the shadow visits, look at the curriculum, meet with the college advising office, and talk to some parents at all the schools on your short list. There is a thread in the private school forum about Maret being woke. I think they all have embraced DEI to some extent, but it is true some are more extreme than others... |
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“I was pretty unimpressed by the lower school—thought it was low pressure to the point of ridiculous. Middle School is better—work is grade level, EF supports are good, and the teachers are stronger (there were some standouts in LS, but it was inconsistent). We are mixed about keeping DC in Upper School.” Very much like my experience. A supportive environment but not one that challenged DC. |
NP. Read the post again. the OP clearly wrote "he is thriving as a freshman in college - he made the Dean's List his first semester!" |
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Decent bait attempt. Don’t fall for it, people. |
| Reviving this thread... any additional thoughts to add? |
| No personal experience, but have a friend whose child is there. She’s Audhd, very smart, and also very quirky. I get the sense it attracts an eclectic group of kids. |
| And I have a friend who goes there whose son is athletic, on the basketball team, super social and outgoing, and needs a little help with organizational skills. They are super happy. I don't know if eclectic is the word...it's like any other high school I feel (just smaller). Theater kids, robotics kids, sporty kids, AP/honors kids, etc. |
Please post a new thread. People are going to read the old posts and reopen the "woke" debate, and the original posters aren't here to clarify their comments. |
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“I don't believe you actually had a child at McLean. There is no deans list at McLean.”
They were referring to college. That was pretty obvious. |
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They can’t handle major dyslexia. If you’re looking to remediate that. My kid has moderate to severe dyslexia. Granted, I spoke with them a few years ago but I was not satisfied (and I heard from other parents) that they wouldn’t be able to handle DC’s needs. Even the school told me I could supplement with a tutor. No thanks.
I know three kids who go there now and yes, both oddballs. They are smart and college kind though. |