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DC Public and Public Charter Schools
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Walls is a good option but I didn’t like the crowded feeling during the open house. I find quibbling over courses as not that differentiating in the long run unless specifically required by a target college.
For subject deep dives there is Gemini and so many videos and podcasts and interest groups to supplement. The advanced kids truly interested in a topic were doing stuff building robots doing intricate craft or writing their own novels and not at all confined to what the teacher is providing in a classroom setting. |
I totally think parents overthink high schools. My high school and college education have zero to do with my success in life. I actually think teaching life and social skills would do a lot more good. The problem is we live in a keeping up with the Jones’s society here, where people think academics are more important than resiliency, resourcefulness, sociability , adaptability, etc. The most successful people I know are the ones that have these skills that seem to be innate. I think the best life lesson you can give a kid is to show them they can adapt to any situation and to let them figure out how to be resilient in the face of challenges. |
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“I totally think parents overthink high schools. My high school and college education have zero to do with my success in life. I actually think teaching life and social skills would do a lot more good. The problem is we live in a keeping up with the Jones’s society here, where people think academics are more important than resiliency, resourcefulness, sociability , adaptability, etc. The most successful people I know are the ones that have these skills that seem to be innate. I think the best life lesson you can give a kid is to show them they can adapt to any situation and to let them figure out how to be resilient in the face of challenges.” +1 |
+1 It doesn’t have to be one or other. You can have a kid get a great academic experience and also be resilient and adaptable. It’s not like private school kids can’t have both. It’s not like the top performers at Deal who leave to go private don’t already have acquired these traits in the chaotic, dysfunctional sh’tshow that is DCPS. The reality is that the academics in DCPS is subpar. Most families with options leave. It’s not about keeping up with the Jones. It’s about meeting the academic needs of the top kids which in DCPS leaves much to be desired. |
LOL. Doesn’t sound like you are “searching” much. |
The number of private admits is some subset of 15…it could just be a few. |
Just send your kid to Eastern and they can pull themselves up by their bootstraps, amirite? |
Eastern definitely works for some kids. And there are kids who attend the most selective privates who never develop resilience and proceed to fall apart as adults. I’d pick Walls over Eastern or private, tbqh, but the PP is right that many high schools are good enough and none are perfect. |
If there's one school where the main criteria for getting in is being really smart, and another school where the main criteria is being really rich, then it seems almost impossible for kids at the second school to keep up with the first. Sorry. Being honest. |
NP. You don’t have to be really smart to get into Walls. You can even be below grade level in certain subjects. The criteria for entrance has significantly degraded with the admission changes. You have to be really smart to get into the top privates in high school. Being rich definately makes it easier to attend. But let’s not pretend that the kids who actually have the optiins of privates or Walls are not really smart. Being honest. |
How many kids apply each year to Walls? 2,000? Is there any private school that gets even half as many applicants? (And the private school applicant pools are surely shallower than they appear because so many kids apply to multiple privates). Privates not only have a much smaller group of kids to pick from, but they also have to put a thumb (or two) on the scale for those whose parents can pay full freight. The statistics don't work, sweetie. |
Walls has a large applicant pool not because the school has the smartest kids but because so many families in the city are desperate for a decent high school. You are delusional if you think the 9th grade admits to Walls are smarter than the 9th grade admits to Sidwell, GDS, etc… Sorry but you are just showing your ignorance of the private school admissions when it comes to high school. And no, my kid does not go to private school. |
Sorry but you are just showing your ignore of basic statistics. |
Ah yes, just because Walls has lots of applicants doesn’t represent the fact that there are no other viable options for many families in the city but rather that they have the smartest group of kids in this town. Yet 1/3rd of them can’t even do grade level math. LOL! |
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Walls doesn't have the smartest students. It has bright students, but not necessarily the smartest.
If they wanted the smartest students, they would use a test to determine admissions. Instead, they use 10-minute interviews conducted by unqualified, untrained interviewers to select on some fuzzy something-or-nother about "demanding one's education." Private schools use test scores, 30+ minute interviews, multiple student-written essays, multiple parent-written essays, and shadow days -- in addition to transcripts and recommendations. Who do you think is better at picking the best students? |