Is this based on personal experience or data? |
But perhaps less opportunities to encounter annoying childish Madison booster parents? That has to be a positive, right? |
What school? Parochial parent but DS is in 1st so no idea what to expect in the higher grades |
New poster. OP, be aware, there are IB bashers on DCUM who post ill-informed things like this post above, and who have no real experience with kids in IB. If your son might be interested in IB at Marshall, go there with him and talk with the school's IB coordinator to find out how the program actually operates. I'm not saying it's better than AP, but both AP and IB have their strengths, and some students thrive in IB while others thrive in AP. But please operate from a position of actual information, not knee-jerk "this is better because I say so anonymously online" posts. That goes for everything about both schools, actually. I agree with an early poster here who said to see if you can get your son a tour at Marshall. And I'd be sure he finds out about and compares things like each school's extracurriculars, clubs, etc. Have your son work on a pros and cons list for each school, but pros and cons rooted in actual details of what they offer now -- not based on strangers' personal biases about IB, AP, Catholic education,public education etc. And the financial aspect is key. Have you been frank with him about how much private HS will cost and how that will affect his college fund? |
| A happy student will be a better student. A better student will get more merit aid for college, and have a deep bench of choices at Catholic Universities. I wouldn't move him unless he is asking to be moved. |
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A bonus for IB schools is that applying to colleges as an IB diploma candidate, with a good GPA of course, is indisputable proof that the student is at the top of their class taking the most rigorous courseload available at their HS.
In contrast with AP, there is far less distinction between the top 25 kids taking a mix of all APs and having all A's. That's where the complaints roll in that acceptances to top colleges were seemingly random because only a couple of the top AP kids got in while they all have practically identical course loads. Nothing to setup them apart from each other. |
I wouldn’t make too much of this. Many IB diploma kids at Marshall end up at schools that are fine but nothing special. Plowing a lot of time into meeting IB diploma requirements doesn’t necessarily distinguish a kid in the ways that actually matter to the most selective schools. And some of those kids end up rather bitter that IB chewed up so much of their time in high school, yet they didn’t feel like they had much to show for it. If your son has his heart set on O’Connell I’d find a way to make it work. - former Marshall parent |
I'm not PP, but their experiences seems to be the exception. |
Exactly. |
I have heard similar from friends but don’t have firsthand experience. |
Just do O'Connell. I gave up my child's spot because of budget reasons, but I would pick O'Connell over Marshall or any of the publics in a heartbeat. Do you want him to meet other Catholics in college? Most colleges have very few practicing Catholics so he'd be better off going to a catholic college anyway. |