| I went to George School, in Newtown, not on the mainline. Also a Quaker School. I was a boarder. Loved it. We competed against all those schools listed, Friends Central, Friends Select, Germantown Friends + Westtown School. All Quaker. |
| NP here also moving to Philadelphia but soon. Is there any hope of getting my K son in a private at such a late date? We are really unsure of what to do since we just found out we'll be moving. |
If you want a progressive Quaker school on the Main line with GDS level of diversity : Friends Central But don't expect to find a school like Sidwell as there won't be any WAPO, POTUS staff, media circus , policy wonks in sight , just a bunch of Quakers like was originally intended. Also, you won't find " a GDS" because the Main Line publics are majority Jewish , so no need to pay $35/K a year for a GDS . That plus most of the Main Line Jewish community is Republican leaning. Translation : Main Line is not Washington . If you want a great education with excellent Ivy matric: send them to Harriton HS for free. If you want to hob nob with the powers that be , don't move from Washington because that just isn't the scene up there . No one cares and the old money will never be interested in you unless you are Pearl Buck or a Nobel Physicist or something. |
Why would you move to Ardmore ? Its mostly a commercial strip and its on the border of West Phila. Main Line is Gladwyne, Bryn Mawr, Penn Valley and Narberth |
Old, very old and on the other side of town a little pocket of wealth , surrounded by Mt Airy and Germantown , which can be pretty sketchy and N Phila is not far away : mega ghetto In DC, it would be like if there was this beautiful private school on the grounds of St Elizabeth's in Anacostia and you lived in Chevy Chase and tried to drive there every day or send you kids on bus, train and automobile to get there... |
BradleyCooper's alma mater. |
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Ardmore is ok. Old. The entire ML is old.
Episcopal Academy is where a lot of the doctors at the hospital where I work send their kids. I work at chop and live in the ML (wayne). Many live in Bryn Mawr and send their kids there. It's the best school districts in the country but everyone goes to private school. Weird. Havertown is where all the young families are living now - really great community. Being built up a lot! You get much more house for your money further down the line. Paoli, malvern, even out in Chester Spring farmland. It's 15 minutes from King Of Prusdua/Wayne and beautiful homes in the 400's. |
I live in Chestnut Hill. It is not right next to one of the roughest areas of the city. Do you mean Mt Airy? It's hippies and young families. Granted, next to Mt Airy you have Germantown, which isn't great. But I've never seen - or even heard of - crime in Chestnut Hill. There's no doubt some exists, of course, as it does everywhere, but there certainty isn't more than anywhere else. I suppose it depends on what you want. I'm not a suburbanite. I like walking to shop, go to the neighborhood pub for dinner or drinks, etc. |
This is not an informed post. chestnut hill is fine, mt airy (which borders the area) is fine. Ardmore is totally, unquestionably fine. I have no idea what the poster means by "staying sw of the city" - down near the airport? That would not be my recommended area. There was good info earlier in this thread and a lot of weird postings later. |
I think you've got a decent chance. There are tons of schools and, outside of the city, very strong publics. You might have a better shot at some of the suburban schools, but it's worth calling everywhere. |
incorrect |
I know several families at Penn Charter. It's very old (oldest Friends school in the country, I think?) so there are lots of traditions and a huge endowment, meaning they have tons of resources and are generous with aid. Very into art - Pre-K has its own studio with art, photography, etc. Strong academics. I don't know exactly how "exclusive" it is (far less than DC for sure) but there is a wait pool and I know families who did not get in or put in the wait pool. Athletics are a big deal. I think every upper school student has to participate in a sport or maybe even two (though to be fair I have no idea if this is atypical compared to other privates). It seems like there are always a few Ivy athletic recruits. Very Quaker, mostly very liberal - more conservative families tend to choose CHA/ Springside, although not exclusively so. I know they have a night when the parents get together and compete in events, as part of bringing the families together. Everyone seems to love the HoS, but I haven't heard any specifics, just that people think very highly of him. Campus is beautiful and I think they're going to be building a new lower school soon. In general, the Philly privates are less about cachet (although there's a bit of that) and more about escaping the colossal failure of the public schools in the city. I know tons of families in private - several of the Friends schools, many of the Catholic schools (Norwood, OMC, etc), and a couple at French International. Everyone I know is very, very happy with their decision. I really don't think you can go wrong w/ any of them once you find a good fit for your family. |
Grew up on the Main Line and went to one of the schools on the above list. Absolutely everything in this post is spot-on. I would just add Episcopal Academy to the list. |
You'll almost certainly be able to find something. The schools are competitive, but not nearly so cut-through at the big name DC schools, and frankly - there are a lot more really good options in Philly suburbs than in DC. |
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We live in Philly and send our kids to private.
OP, in general I really like the Friends schools, of which there are many. I also appreciate the elementary only schools--Plymouth Meeting Friends School is an incredible small school that runs pre-K to 6th grade--love love love this school. Greene Street Friends is another strong school that runs through 8th. Other options that go through high school that you might want to investigate: Germantown Friends, Friends Central, Abington Friends, Penn Charter, Friends Select (downtown). It really depends partly on your location and how far you're willing to travel. I consider all of these fairly progressive. And to the pp you would almost certainly be able to find spots for kindergarten. |