| GDS has been course correcting after overenrollment during early COVID years. |
We went to GDS's open house with our 7th grader this past winter and saw many 7th graders from our k-8. It was their first in person open house post-covid. |
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How far is the airport for an occasional commute?
If your child is indeed super bright and wants amazing co-curriculars, I’d look at the boarding schools up north, and apply to a few in addition to local day schools. Then re-evaluate your actual options next year. These schools accept between 80 to 200 new freshman each year, depending on the school. There are no pre-established friendship groups that make arriving as a 9th grader difficult. And a few also give amazing aid, even to families earning up to $600k/year. Just focus on the large endowment per student schools. Our favorites are Deerfield, St. Paul’s, and Lawrenceville. But there are at least a dozen at the super elite level. |
Its math. 1200 - 320 = 880 kids who will not be able to get in. I believe at least a slight preference is given to fully qualified students who are coming from a Catholic school. |
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I’ll just add that the schools have different application processes. Field and Burke put a lot of weight on the kid snd parent interviews because they are shooting for a specific culture fit. St John’s doesn’t do interviews except for the Benilde program, I think. Much more focused on test scores and grades.
Definitely do the open houses in the fall, we found them extremely informative, but also gave a really good sense of the school vibes. Also have your child do the shadow visits. They fill Up early so get those scheduled as soon as you can. I think they don’t allow registration until certain portions of the applications are complete, so keep that in mind also. Good luck. It’s an exhausting process. |