'most people' do not sign their kids up for tutoring at 1 yo you psychopath and at no point did op say it was a bad school |
op-this is so so so helpful - thank you. so much appreciated. |
It isn’t my job to educate you. Link: https://avenuemagazine.com/prep-schools-pre-nursery-kids-new-york/ |
It isn’t your job. Nor is anyone asking or wanting you to educate us Nor is an article about music classes for toddlers written in avenue magazine educating anyone on anything So all things considered, I think you’re free to go |
Trevor had a Spring event. So did Loyola, if I recall. If you're open to Catholic schools, I think Loyola on the UES is a hidden gem. A small really nice community with rigorous academics, and the kids go on to top colleges. They have a new building, and really stood out for their service opportunities. It's also about 20K less than most peer schools, and unlike most independent schools, they give academic scholarships. My child won around 15K a year, which brought the tuition down to around 35/40K a year, if I recall. There are options, you just have to dig. I already mentioned Franklin previously...I get not wanting to pay 70K only to end up at what you perceive to be a mediocre college, but Franklin in 32K, so that might make it worth the risk. I also agree about joining the Applying to High School FB group if you are seriously considering public school. It is a treasure trove of information and assistance on the public process. They'll have some information on Catholic schools too...just don't ask about private schools, they'll ice you out and get nasty. |
Depressing that people consider sending their kid to music class "prep" for preschool, Jesus. |
| “Most people are tutoring their 1 year olds” and the article is about Rockin’ With Andy and Little Maestros. I can’t tell what is a joke here sometimes. |
op - loyola looks impresssive. We're not catholic but i think maybe we dont have to be? How hard is it to get in? |
I also think Loyola is great. You don’t have to be Catholic but it is very small. The Catholics are often overlooked. Dominican Academy is never talked about but their exmissions are about on par with SH but they are under 30k. I know some very smart girls that graduated from DA and are at great colleges and doing well. Regis is wonderful if you’re catholic and very high achieving but Xavier is also very good and you don’t have to be catholic. I know several Jewish families that send their sons there. It’s a great location and very robust in sports, arts and extracurriculars. Very big on developing character and personal responsibility. Community service is required all years and seniors spend every Monday in the last half of the senior year working in direct service for a nonprofit. Better for character development than prestige but good students go on to top schools. We were very impressed with what we saw when we were looking at high schools for our son. To be honest I think all these schools are very good (including Dwight). It’s the price tag that makes it all so fraught. |
You do not have to be Catholic to get in. I'm not sure how competitive it is to get in as it is fairly self-selecting, but it's by no means a pay and you get in kind of place. They do place a lot of emphasis on character and having something you're passionate about. It is indeed small, so your child has to be okay with that, but it breeds a closeness that alums rave about 40 years later. The admissions team is lovely, and I found them very accessible and open. Xavier is certainly a good alternative for boys too, but MUCH larger and easier to get into. Very sports-centric, and kids come from all over the City, NJ and LI to go there. You might as well throw Fordham Prep in there too if you're open to Catholic Jesuit schools. It's on the campus of Fordham University in The Bronx, and also has a ton of kids from Westchester, so it's a very different vibe from Xavier, but also excellent. I think you would probably consider it along the lines of Dwight, but the other school my child got a large award to go to was Leman. If I recall it would have brought the tuition down to around 45/50K. It was one of our safety schools, but I actually ended up liking it well enough. Not well enough to spend 70K for, but it was a good back up and with the award I could have talked myself into it. If you decide to look at public, be aware that your child's grades do matter for non-SHS but selective schools (think Bard, Beacon, Millennium). However your school's grades translate, they won't have a good chance of getting into the top public schools unless the are Tier 1 (this is for selective, non-SHS). |
And even if you are in Tier 1, there are thousands of other kids in Tier 1. At which point it is a lottery. And if you aren't lucky enough to be near the top of the lottery, the options thin out pretty quickly. Pretty much everyone in Tier 1 gets a school that is "fine." Then to complicate things there are some schools where you basically need to be tier 1, I think the lottery does factor in, but there is also an essay - Beacon, I think NEST+M, perhaps Bard? You need a PhD to figure out the public school process (we considered and had at least decent offers from SHSAT, public and private so it was a very exhausting fall of 8th grade - we did not consider Catholic which at least eliminated one thing). |
Xavier and FP are bigger so maybe easier to get a place in some respects but they also get tons of applicants. I know Xavier has the Ignatian Scholars program which is more difficult to get into and requires straights As and a top scores on the HSPT. My son picked another school but got into Ignatian Scholars and we strongly considered it. It’s often a 2nd choice for kids who didn’t make the cut at Regis. |
| OP - i ended up using Researcher in Copilot to interrogate my kids unprepped ISEE scores, look at independent schools across NYC, look at public schools across NYC and westchester publics and tell me which ones were most likely and which ones offered lowest and highest ROI. It basically said - Avenues, LREI, Trevor Day, Grace Church and even fieldston have the worst ROI (money spent for exmissions quality and innovative future focused curriculum), the westchester publics have the highest, that of the independents and publics that my child could realistically reach for, riverdale, xavier, bard and beacon were the top. Basically it told me to move to westchester. Which I may take it up on. |
Funny. Something similar was said about Trevor on the Speyer thread and people started going ballistic in defense of it, very odd. It’s a 3T and not worth the money. If you can get into Bard or Beacon go for it instead. Save the money |
Garbage in, garbage out. How does one measure "innovative future focused curriculum?" And moving to the burbs is a lifestyle choice - doing it for schools (especially if your kid is pretty far along) is a horrible decision. |