| For Prep it all depends on how quickly each boy gets with Prep's program. Some are better prepared than others, for instance if they're coming from Mater Dei, while some boys are a year older and more mature. DS came from a very soft and very kind MS, where, during the early pandemic years it was okay to turn homework in late and the option always seemed to exist to retake a test he hadn't done well in. Accordingly, that was his expectation of Prep going in as a new 9th grader. Prep isn't soft. It took DS the best part of an academic year to succumb and get fully on board with Prep's academic expectations. But he's on board now, doing well academically, is challenged, and loves his school. |
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Any school which DCUM thinks is "rigorous" is a pressure cooker - at least on the rigorous track.
The real question is whether there is only a rigorous track at Prep or if there also are other tracks which are leas rigorous for less competitive students. |
| At prep, a quarter of the class will be coming from one place this year (mater dei.) As a previous poster said, Gonzaga doesn’t seem to have a huge group coming from one place so that’s something to keep in mind too. |
There are very few honors classes available to freshman. And, only a few sophomores can take an AP class. Definitely not a pressure cooker environment. Students have time to mature and figure out what level classes are the best fit for them. |
| A quarter of the class from one place is a lot. |
Well, actually when you look at just Day students and take the (largely International) students out of the equation about a third of the incoming freshman are from Mater Dei. There’s also another large chunk from traditional feeder schools (Catholic K-8s in NWDC, western MoCo and the VA towns close to the AL bridge. So Prep classes are generally more homogeneous than those on Eye Street which have a much broader geographic range. Prep’s high price also affect the composition of the class. |
| Wow!!! A third?! |
Landon all the way. Much better peer group both for the kid and you. No bullying |
Wasn’t there a CSPAN special about the culture at Prep? |
Can you say more about this? Our DS is choosing between St. Anselm’s and Prep. |
| One third from mater dei is a different kind of pressure cooker definitely. |
Eh, yes and no. A lot of parents send their kids to Mater Dei to catch up—oftentimes starting off by repeating the grade they completed elsewhere. This gives the kid an extra year to mature and develop better study habits (and catch up in math). This isn’t unique to MD and Gtown Prep. I know boys who strategically enroll in a grade they just completed when to better equip them for a prep school environment. I also don’t think Gtown Prep is especially rigorous. If you went to a single-sex catholic high school, you realize they are all pretty much the same. The real difference is demographics. Some schools do an excellent job of providing need-based financial assistance while others are just the logical landing place for certain affluent families. The good news is that GP isn’t the pre-frat boy jerk factory it was in the 1980s/90s etc. Having said that, the school did retain its reputation for launching entrepreneurs: at least one student (who graduated within the last handful of years) made quite a bit of money selling high quality fake ids…primarily to kids in local public schools. |
Several freshman this year are in honors Precalc and on to Calculus BC next year. |
You can't be serious. One of my DS's best friends was bullied relentlessly at Landon, particularly on the bus. School did very little to help and the parents basically had to manage the whole thing. He thought about transferring out but ultimately hung in and things got better. But do not think there aren't mean boys out there. |