Agree, why would you told? What impact does it have on you. |
It's true at our private. Granny's donation was the reason a kid stayed way longer then they should have. If the mother hadn't finally put her foot down, the kid would still be there driving everybody crazy. |
11:04 LOL right back at you. Of course there are going to be Beauvoir boys who do well (that's obvious), but not all of them are at the top of their class. I have heard of others who struggle. These are the ones that I am curious if they counsel out and if they do, when that typically occurs? 6th? 8th? |
NP here. Our DS was "counseled out" in this indirect fashion. The school took the route above, never quite saying "we want him gone" but making it quite clear that they wanted him out. It started with "We really do hope [DS] will walk through on graduation in X number of years", letting us know that graduation was far from guaranteed. Then, like PP said, he was getting into more and more trouble for small things, plus frequent talks with the school counselor, etc. We decided to pull him from the school before he was actually "invited" to leave. It was painful, but in the end it was the right thing for DS. We transferred schools and held him back a year and now he is thriving. |
We were counseled out of a Big 3. We had a parent teacher conference that seemed additional and we asked, had to ask, if this was unusual and what it meant. We were told they just wanted to visit. Then we were brought in a couple months later and told our DC was not invited back. our DC excelled academically and was reserved, but not a troublemaker. I heard from the teacher that one of the other DCs in the class didn't feel secure around our DC, not sure what that means. I do know my DC is a minority and the other DCs parents are wealthy and influential. Will never know. DC since accepted to other top schools and is thriving. |
Wow - I would have persued this with the school. |
Maybe the child who was counseled out was bullying the other child in the class. Maybe there were many more cues and the parents had trouble believing that a child well-behaved at home could be a problem at school, and discounted warnings. Or maybe this is a totally phony post from a troll. Sorry, but schools don't counsel out wonderful students who are perfectly behaved. Please, people need to use some common sense and stop being so gullible. |
I agree that it speaks very poorly of the school. It also is only the perspective of the school/a one sided view, so it could be biased. Did the student really have behavior problems or was it related to bullying/personality conflicts? Was it proven without a doubt the two seniors cheated or were they just accused? One of the problems with private school is that your kid can be expelled and there is no recourse. |
I think the original post is also phony. Kids know when discipline has occurred, so I could see everyone in a community knowing about expulsions, but it is facially ridiculous to assume an "administration" informed parents about the details of counseling out of different kids. Parent gossip? Okay. Administration telling other parents? No. I think people are trying to wind up the poor OP with these phony/malicious stories about schools that are evil cesspits of false accusations, classroom teachers who inform families of their contract status, and leaked confidential information. |
It will likely dissapoint a pot stirrer like you, but the occasional expulsion for honor code violation aside, STA has very low attrition. The counsel out happens as the boys are applying out from Beauvoir in 3rd. Saint Albans gives its own test just to be sure. so that's that. Spots become available not because boys are asked to leave, but because spots are added in 6th, 7th and 9th. |
There was a kid in my child's class who fits this description. I am sure they are doing well at whatever school they are at now, but the kid in question simply was a bad fit for the school. There was nothing "wrong" with them and the parents were really terrific people, but you could just tell they weren't an engaged student, were often lying on the floor not paying attention to the teacher etc. |
So does this mean that no students at private schools have Cs? Does everyone have a GPA over 2.3? I though there was no grade inflation? |
Do you really think two seniors could go missing in the middle of the year and administration would not have to address the reason? Especially if it involved academic dishonesty? That they bragged about? |
As a private school graduate, everyone knew, from students to parents, who had been expelled (which happens rarely, so of course it's a scandal that everyone knows about) or who was being counselled out. It was never a secret. The faculty or administration wouldn't explicitly state why such a student was being counselled out but in a small school environment (sub 100 per grade) the students know who's doing poorly academically. And someone would always ask why so-and-so was leaving and the teacher's response was always, "it's a better fit for *insert leaving student's name here* elsewhere." We all knew what it meant, and of course we told our parents in the typical after-school chatter.
Private schools are akin to small towns. Everyone knows everything about everyone else. |
good. Thank you for this. DS is having similar issues, and the school isn't counseling us, but I see the writing on the wall. Being at the bottom third of his class at college app time is not going to do him any good. |