How many students in the graduating class? It appears a lot of them goes to colleges outside of top 30. |
for Dalton - if you google the last names of the ones who got admitted to HYP, almost all are very connected / wealthy / donors |
What are you implying? If one is not a big donor, the kid stands no chance to HYP? |
This is true from any HS these days, not just Dalton or other top tier NYC private. Donor, diversity, recruited for some specialty (athlete, etc), strong connections, otherwise it’s nearly impossible and you need an insanely strong resume. The advantage of the top tier schools is that they give you the resources to actually build that “insanely strong resume” if you are willing/able, sets you up better for the next level down of colleges, and sets you up better to succeed wherever you do actually end up. And the latter is ultimately what actually matters, not “college matriculation” itself as some on this board would suggest. |
Biggest advantage is having college educated parents who are actively involed in a child's education, whether private or public school. Making it about donor, diversity, athlete, connections, etc... devalues the effort given. |
In long term success of a young person, yes 100%. For the specific datapoint of admissions to Harvard and the like, no. But I’d contend that top schools’ focus on those items has itself devalued the “prestige” of their degrees anyway. |
No one can spell out what does it entail. Set you up for college, set you up for life? How is it possible to set you up for life? Sounds like marketing to me. Using highly ambiguous language. |
The Trinity kids would be successful even if they didn’t go there because their parents have a lot of $. Other kids would be doing ... just okay. |
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In the middle of the school application process for K. Looking at St. Bs, Dalton, Trinity, Town, Riverdale and Hunter.
We have no hooks/connections and won’t need FA. Looking for rigorous academics that help kids develop their minds/interests and good exmissions for the K-8 schools or good college placement for the K-12 schools. Also would like a school where a well adjusted, confident kid can stay well adjusted and confident and make some lifelong friends. I know these are all excellent schools and all are very difficult to get into, but if you got into all of them and ignored the benefit of free tuition from Hunter—i.e., just considered each school on its merits, which would you pick or how would you compare them. (I know that we aren’t getting into all but I want to have some comparison before decision time.) |
Town is great! They're right in the sweet spot. They manage to prepare kids well for the most rigorous high schools, but while still letting them be kids and enjoy learning before entering the pressure cooker. |
I would rank in this orde: Dalton, Trinity, Riverdale, St B, Town, Hunter |
| Thanks! How are you ordering them? Academically most rigorous to least rigorous, where kids seem to thrive most/enjoy learning or some other criteria or group of criteria? |
| And are you putting St. B and Town further down the list b/c they only go to 8th grade or are you ignoring that in the ordering? |
We definitely preferred K-12. I’m ranking them how I would rank them for my child if I had a boy. Full disclosure, my daughter goes to Dalton, and we are very happy there. We had no interest in Hunter, so that is why I put it last. Preferred Dalton educational philosophy vs Trinity (more progressive vs very traditional), and also preferred Manhattan schools vs the Bronx. I have never visited Town and do not know anyone with a kid there. I know many people with boys at St B who are quite happy. |
Town---have heard wonderful things about it. My DCs went to a different K-8 but I liked the model, particularly during the middle school years. I know people want to avoid the HS application process, but for both of my kids it was a good learning experience. We enjoyed looking at different schools as a family, and they had a chance to test out essay-writing, taking standardized tests, and interview skills before applying to college. At this age, I would not rule out location as an important factor in making your decision. It's nice to live close to school during the early years. |