If you took the scores of just the O'Connell kids who come from homes similar to those that feed to Langley, I'm sure the SATs score would be comparable. |
So why spend the thousands of dollars? |
Visi/Gonzaga are highly selective and sought-after schools for most Catholics. You don't just apply and get it. It's not so easy. |
Some people want the Catholic education for their kids. My nieces go to O'Connell and they have been in Catholic schools all their lives - both here and overseas. I don't think their parents wanted to start them in public for high school. |
Not true if you DON'T live in Kensignton, Chevy Chase, NWDC, Potomac, Bethesda. |
Because it's a better fit for my kid and it's our money to spend? What's your concern? |
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OP,
When you consider the responses that you get here, remember the profile of the DCUM user (e.g. uptight snob). There is nothing wrong with any of the schools that have been mentioned. Kids can and do get great educations at O'Connell and Ireton as well as Heights, Gonzaga etc. True, they are larger and more inclusive, but the strong students get good educations despite what PPs said. Don't believe me? It seems that it was good enough for Stanford, Berkeley, UCLA, Georgetown, Duke, Northwestern, W&M, Carnegie Mellon, Notre Dame, Rice, Wash U., and Penn this year. I would have no problem with my kids attending either school. Consider whether any perceived increase in prestige is worth making your life crazy trying to get kids to schools that are farther away. |
| This is OP. I appreciate the responses that were informative. I did not want to get into public vs private debate... I think I received some good answers about those catholic schools focused more on academics vs those that might not be, but might offer something else in return. I am a firm believer that no one school is a good fit for each child. I simply wanted to know the academic focused schools in our area and I can research the remainder. Not so much concerned with prestige as finding a good school where my child can learn, grow and mature in a parochial environment. |
Not to debate private vs. public vs. parochial, and not sure why you used the term... but most the schools mentioned are private not parochial... (Gonzaga, Prep, Heights) St. Anselms, not sure. |
| If you're saying parochial means "parish school" (but see Wikipedia gives it a broader definition), then none of the high schools mentioned are "parish schools." Maybe you meant Diocesan? |
None of the schools receive funds from the ADW. |
| OP here - I mean I am looking for a school with religious (Catholic) education, religious beliefs and ethical teaching etc. Jesuits fit the bill of what I would consider a Catholic education for sure. |
| She means Catholic. |
There are a lot of Gonzaga students from Virginia. |
Oakcrest is in McLean, and is a small all-girls high school. O'Connell is in Arlington, right on the edge of Falls Church. Those are the only two Catholic high schools in the four jurisdictions named. |