I’m guessing you don’t realize that Ryken is a program at Good Counsel and Benilde is a program at SJC. There’s no third. |
These schools also give priority to students who are Catholic (and can show they have commitment to the faith, parish membership, 1st communion, CCD, etc.) but have not attended parochial school. I do agree that they give top priority to students who have private ES and MS, but, next in line are Catholics who have not attended parochial school. Anybody with a parent alumni will also get priority over random non-catholic students applying. |
The Catholic Church loves money.....so you should be ok. |
+1 |
If you go by tuition, the Quakers and Episcopalians love it more. |
Not the OP, but families of kids with disabilities often put up with difficult commutes because it can be hard to find good fit schools. |
+1 Plus these particular programs only accept 40-50 kids per year in the freshman class, and you can’t join the programs in later years. |
| Yes, they admit non-Catholics. My son graduated from one of the schools and had a good friend in the program with him who was Jewish. |
St Mary’s Ryken is also a WCAC school in Leonardtown. I think that was the confusion. |
+1 |
| Someone commented in a more recent thread that there is an HSPT “cutoff” for these schools. First I’ve heard of a minimum threshold… does anyone have further insights? |
| We have a freshman in the SJC Benilde program this year. There is a mix of kids from a whole variety of schools and religious backgrounds. If your child makes a clear case for the program in his application and the testing (both HSPT and neuropsych) shows potential, your kid has a shot. |
What does show potential mean? Above average WISC scores? |