There would never be that many walkons for the baseball team. What your son probably saw were recruited baseball players who were allowed to play freshman football and did not participate with the fall travel team. Then they participated in the spring baseball tryouts and made the team, but they were not “walkons.” |
+1 |
SJC has families from all over the region and a virtual BTSN makes it possible for those parents who live and work far away to participate. We live close and in-person mtgs are no problem for us. But we recognize that this is a reflection of something we value at the school - diversity and inclusion in action. You likely have a different view and so you are at a different school. |
I see the SJC admin has entered the room to try to explain away the embarrassing Zoom situation with some DEI nonsense. |
That’s your response? Embarrassing. |
PP, why are you so hateful? Please note that at the mother’s club meeting held 9/4, Mr. Themistos announced that the next back to school night would be in person, not virtual. So you can stop spreading misinformation. |
I LOVE virtual BTSN. It was great to go in person freshman year but I really appreciated it not taking the entire night (we do not live very close) especially with multiple kids and sports, etc its great.
Over the course of the year I met with several of my kids teachers in person to discuss various issues. All I had to do was ask and it wasn't a problem at all. Not the same I know but its not as if BTSN is the only opportunity to meet teachers. Sounds like next year I will be making the BTSN trek! |
If there are issues, I go to the admin, not the teacher. As for being perfect. Nope. Not in the least. But, I also understand that part of the process of growing up is learning to make mistakes, learning to fail, and how to deal and what to do when you make a mistake or fail. But, hey, helicopter away. |
I would love an update on how your kid did with college acceptances this year. Hopefully he made it to the school he wanted or somewhere he will be as happy? We are in a similar position, and it would be so helpful to hear how things ended up working out. |
OMG so glad we didn't choose this school! I love how the tour shows you the athletic facilities that the non d1 kids will never use!
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Curious about the 1:1 iPad program. What is the pedagogical philosophy behind this idea? Doesn’t it feel a bit…antithetical to Catholic education to hand every kid an iPad…especially in a world that is already so screen-saturated? |
I had reservations about the iPad initially for my freshman, but after almost 8 months now with it, it’s worked out very well. The school has limitations that it’s only for schoolwork, there are consequences if they use it for anything else. Most textbooks are accessed on the iPad so the kids aren’t carrying around heavy loads of textbooks to and from school. They use an Apple Pencil and certain apps the school provides to take notes and do homework, and submit directly to the teachers from the iPad. If my kid happens to be sick and stayed home, there’s no worries that the textbooks and notebooks were left at school. They can email teachers and classmates for notes and assignments, and get the work done just, and submitted, just with the iPad. It’s convenient for commutes to/from school and to/from after school activities or long rides to sport events. My kid only has to carry that iPad and the Pencil, and makes the most of commuting times to check emails and get homework done. My kid LOVES being able to do this. |
My son went there for baseball several years ago. He was good player but not excellent enough. It was clear he didn’t have a path forward on the team. Also, the baseball team, and I assume other sports there, is an all life-encompassing, high pressure thing for the kid and the family. He transferred back to our DCPS high school after freshman year and loved his last 3 years of high school. Now at a great college. However, the study habits and organizational skills he learned at SJC helped him succeed so it’s a mixed bag. |
My DD does another sport, and has a completely different experience. It was not at all encompassing or stressful. The team had weekly meets during the season and practices were “required”, but the coaches were very relaxed about the requirements. Kids missed practices or meets for various reasons, and it was not a big deal at all. All kids who wanted to be on the team and compete, were given the opportunity whether they were varsity or JV. Once the season was over and after the banquet, then the kids were free from that sport. My DD had so much fun, and loved the team and the coaches. She loved how close the girls on the teams became despite different ages. |
They’re doing it at most other Catholic schools. The question to ask is which schools, and in which divisions, are they monitoring those devices during the school day? I’m at a school that only monitors at the MS. It’s a free for all in the US and kids use their school devices the same way they would use their cell phone |