| BI has certainly attracted a lot of MAGA offspring lately. Their theater department seems to be consistently good, and their sports teams largely depend on who is coaching, much like every other school around. I’ve generally found O'Connell kids to be more self-aware and engaging than BI but neither school population is remarkable. If your kid has gone to Catholic schools for elementary and middle school I’m sure they would find their people in either place. |
Not in the curriculum, it hasn’t. That’s a new thing. |
Self aware and engaging? Sheesh, how in the world would you possibly know this? |
What does that even mean? It’s fine to have diversity of political thought. It makes class discussions more interesting. Students figure out how to respect other viewpoints. Everything doesn’t have to be “group think.” How many BI and DJO students do you know where you can generalize that 900 students at a nearby high school are less engaging and self aware? This is silly. |
My kids' K-8 is geographically centered between BI and DJO, so about 1/4 of the 8th grade class typically goes to BI and 1/4 to DJO, with a couple to PVI, 1 or 2 to Visitation and GZ, and the remainder to public. If you're trying to use "self-aware and engaging" as a euphemism for the sporty popular kids, I'd agree with that a bit more (although not that characterization of the popular crowd, at all) because the more academic and artistic kids do tend to choose BI. Otherwise, there's really no difference between the kids who choose either school and it comes down to family preference and location. |
I’m the PP you’re quoting and I was not suggesting any of the things you claim. The families we know at these schools are not MAGA. I’m sure some families there are (as is true for probably every private in the DMV) but I have no idea what percentage are MAGA. By “incorporating Catholicism into the curriculum” I meant students at these schools take religion all four years, go to mass about once a month, say a prayer before the class starts, etc. |
This post is a more accurate description than the previous |
| All the families we know at Paul the Great are MAGA. It's possible O'Connell has more wealth but I live in between the two and the families who send their children to both schools are wealthy. I really like the vibe at O'Connell, the academics, and the families there. On the whole they are more centrist, less political, and interested in a variety of things like religion, service, academics, theater, and sports. All the ones sending their kids to Paul the Great are very conservative or overly into sports and more serious but that might just be my area. I'm sure the closer you get to the school the more mainstream the families are. Just my anecdotal experience over the years from the church families who have kids that attend. |
Seems like you're confusing Paul VI and John Paul the Great. No one has ever accused the JPG student body of being "overly into sports". |
You're definitely not talking about JPG when you characterize them as in a similar level of wealth to O'Connell. You have to be thinking of PVI. |
| Oh yes. PVI. You are right. |
| Would BI culture/students be described as centrist, less political and families interested in a variety of things? Aka mainstream |
There's a little bit of everything at BI but the majority of the kids are apolitical/indifferent. I'd say they're non-judgmental but cliquish. |
| My kid is at BI and I consider my family mainstream. I really like BI. |
| DJO has a reputation that Yorktown families send kids there when they think they need more structure and are potential troublemakers. |