This year they took 9 in 7th grade, almost all connected kids. |
| Look at St. Anselms Abbey. |
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Based on what you are describing, I'd strongly look into Landon and Bullis.
Good luck with your search. |
| 6th hard, 7th not so much. We know people who got rejected in 6th and came back in 7th and had no trouble. |
Honestly, it's way more selective. |
It’s smaller than STA, so more selective, but would be a better fit for a middle of the road student who isn’t a high flyer academically. |
St. Anselm’s is definitely not a place where “middle of the road” students find success. It’s curriculum is famously very rigorous, and the students are very academically focused. That said, I’m not sure it would be a good fit for OP. St. Anselm’s is probably more intellectual but less athletic than STA, which sounds like it’s not what OP is looking for. |
This. Academically much tougher but athletics and cachet much lower. If you can’t get into Albans you can’t get into the Abbey. |
| Are the SAAS crowd really proffering that it is more competitive than St. Alban’s? I’m not debating the merits of self-perceived and loudly exclaimed rigor. Instead, regardless of whether it’s warranted or not, do you REALLY believe that the acceptance rate at St. Anselm’s is lower than St. Alban’s ? |
| Abbey parent of an average student accepted at 6th grade. For the student, it's a lot of work and it's certainly easier for academic standouts to succeed, but it's simply not the case that the whole incoming 6th grade class are standouts or that they need to be. It would be much harder to join at 7th (fewer spaces) and harder on the student to keep up/catch up without the 6th grade year. |
What? |
| They are both excellent schools. (STA and SAAS). I suggested looking at the Abbey above so that OP could have some good options. I’m not sure why there is often a DCUM food fight over these two schools. I don’t think it does either school any favors. It’s stupid to keep ranting about which one is better. They both turn out nice, well-rounded and smart kids. I have experience with both schools via husband and son. You cannot go wrong with either one. |
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They're both fantastic schools but St Anselm's is a much, much easier admit.
My son was did not get into STA for 6th. We called St Anselm's in April of that year and they said they would be happy to have him. They arranged 1:1 admissions testing the following weekend. We have two family friends who had a similar experience in other years (which is why we thought to call St Anselm's) He ended up going elsewhere due to the commute but but we loved the school. |
Um, OP said "not too much religion or right wing craziness" |
This. Regardless of whether SAAS parents have convinced themselves that the school only caters to the brightest, most intellectually curious and rigorous boys, it's empirically materially easier to get in. |