Not mean. Totally true. The administrators are definitely weird and, obviously now in retrospect, completely incompetent, at running the business side of a school. That said, the small size was a major plus for the kid that gets overlooked or ignored in a larger classroom, or the kid that needs more attention. The uncertainty was always a coin flip, for sure. And landed unfortunately for those that were enrolled this year. Personally, we left many years ago because we were tired of feeling like a piggy bank for the administration to fund a disproportionate number of kids on financial aid. I get the mission. It's a worthy one. But not at the expense of running the entire school into the ground. |
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Former parent who saw many red flags and corruption…but rode it out for the many reasons many families do…For those unaware, years ago, a house was purchased at 9490 River Road that was going to be the Gold’s personal residence with a school built on the land. Architects hired (expensive cost and a lawsuit because they weren’t paid) and a frantic request for money. Many of us never donated and went looking for 990s…but we couldn’t find any at the time - something rotten in Denmark! The long story short is money raised - close to $500k or more if I recall, but $ never returned AFTER the deal fell through. Former family in real estate worked on the deal and they abruptly left afterwards. Apparently there was black mold in the house! Many of us joked that funds went to pay for daughter’s bat mitzvah and other daughter’s tuition at Holton arms…but really, many of us weren’t kidding!! We saw many egregious things - charging families $25 for field trips when really they cost nothing (free admission or parents drove)… multiply that by 30 kids -where did $ go? Also, where did Covid relief funds, PPP money go? The school never published financials like other private schools, an annual fund update or state of the school info.
Feynman is a part of our past but always frustrated with the lack of transparency and devious, underhanded way they pocketed money for personal use. I would pursue legal actions if I were there and gather as a group of parents/faculty to work in tandem. There are a bunch of former faculty, who apparently had to sign NDAs - red flag as who signs an NDA at a school? Privacy for students is imperative but the NDA covered discussions about operations… there are many individuals who know where the bodies are buried… so it would be easy to gather a trail of evidence or info for an audit. Clearly closing the doors of a school mid year is breach of contract. Someone suggested reaching out to press and many local tv stations have consumer/fradulent activity journalists. So sorry for everyone impacted and sadly, all of us who left periodically checked to see when the doors would close…it was always a question of when not if… |
But didn’t they require WISCV or WPPSI gifted scores? |
| They used when my DC attended. Maybe that was dropped. |
Requiring a score isn't the same thing as rejecting anyone below a certain level. |
I think they required you to submit the test results, but didn’t have (or at least didn’t publicize) a minimum cutoff. |
So, basically just for show. That's so sleazy. |
Well, I got the sense there was an approximate minimum but it was not a hard cutoff. And as their financial issues worsened they were more willing to be flexible there. |
You need a base number of students to run the school. The number of gifted kids with parents who want them in that environment and can afford it was never going to be enough to make ends meet |
Honestly, the number of really "gifted kids" is really small. Sorry, all you doting parents. That doesn't mean your DSs/DDs aren't smart for their age. But "gifted"? Unlikely. |
Thanks for sharing. FWIW, Cheryl Rose is a well-regarded bankruptcy trustee (she’s the one assigned to this guess). |
| What about Oneness in Bethesda? |
If families from Feynman are scrambling, this school is warm, inclusive, and great for intelligent little minds |
Whatever. There is a clear definition. Mine had obviously met it by age 2. It comes with massive downsides, which is why Feynman was so important. Picture a 5 year old describing Planck length to their Kindergarten class. It does not go well. At Feynman, no one would blink an eye (at least 5-10 years ago). That’s why we overlooked all of the red flags. Snarkiness is not helpful or welcome here. |