Since when does anyone consider NCS/STA and Sidwell religious? I think the poster was referring to Catholics. And no they aren’t great comparatively |
I suspect this isn’t an issue of wanting basic physics but an issue of not having space in a higher level version. Or - as noted above - kid reached senior year and realized they wanted to add Physics after not taking it Jr year and not registering for it in registration for Senior year - and is now asking for a change - after all priority slots for seniors were considered and doled out. That’s not a failure of the school scheduling - but mismanagement of student planning. |
I’ll add - still sorry it’s not working out for the student - but fingers pointed at school seem misdirected. Student should find an online course and drop a course in day to take it - and have school indicate in college process the student couldn’t get course at school so went other route to comply with admissions I know of another case where a school genuinely didn’t run a top level math course and student took online and school made this note in college admissions process |
Only parochial schools. Topntier privates have MUCH more to offer for college bound kids - I say this because our school does not offer shop or driver's ed the way my public school did. |
I don’t know about Sidwell, but NCS and STA have required cathedral and chapel services every week and religion classes are required. They are very much rooted in their Episcopal identity. |
And Sidwell has meeting for worship weekly and starts all meetings with silence. And they certainly use Quaker values as their excuse often to say no or the Quaker process as an excuse to slow change/things down on a huge range of topics. Sure, it’s not like the conversation/recruitment agendas sometimes seen among evangelical, Christian colonialism, or Latter Day Saints (just as an incomplete list of examples) - so maybe it feels less religious to some? But Sidwell is still using religion to make relevant school policy decisions. Honestly anything that made no sense to us used Quaker as the reason - yet Quaker applied to scenario A if they didn’t want to do it but not to exact same scenario B if they didn’t want to do it. |
There are no parochial high schools in the DC area. If you are using parochial as a pejorative for independent Catholic schools, I will say that St. Anselms can compete head on with any private school in the region for rigor. |
The IRS thinks they’re religious. |
| LOL imagine paying $50k for private school and being told there isn’t room in the physics class, take it online |
The religion classes are academic and do not focus on Episcopalianism. Also, from what I understand, chapel services include those focusing on different religious holidays, though the services, themselves, are still inherently Christian. |
Imagine paying and then having too many people be added to a class because they changed their minds at the last minute after staffing and scheduling decisions had already been made. |
This Ops scenario sounds like this |
| Our private starts with physics in 9th. Partly for the reason OP mentioned. |
A few years ago we looked at privates and my kid was accelerated in math so we were told we had to do it online or outside at our cost. |
How accelerated? GDS -- which is generally very opposed to acceleration -- has two years of classes post calculus. I assume many privates are similar. |