NP here - our DC at SFS also has no tutors and we have never even known what their HW is. Friend group has maybe one with a tutor in one subject, so PP's child is not an anomaly. But our kid started in 9th - are your "various circles" families with kids that started earlier than 9th? We did know a family (different aged child) from SFS who started their perfectly capable children with summer tutors in 2nd grade for fear of falling behind classmates....I got the feeling her "crowd" was using tutors unnecessarily. We haven't run into those types in our time there - but we also know fewer families at a 9th entry during COVID times. |
Why do you need to understand it? I have a big 3 kid that doesn’t mind the work and really don’t care that much about the high school choices of other kids and their parents. I assume they are basing they decision on best fit, like we did. |
For our kid, the goal isn't college placement or outcome (and they are still this way in college search). They chose their school over Maret because they felt like there were more kids in class that were serious about academics and were fully prepared for class. Maret had more of a mix (which, I personally like). This is not to diss Maret or any other school, as DC felt they could succeed in any of the area schools and get the academic challenge at all of them. But for them, they liked the more serious nature at the school they chose. |
Not really. That profile gets ushered to Tier 2 & 3 tiny slacs for $80k a year full pay. It’s a symbiotic school and slac relationship. They usually require grad school as well due to less career services and studies majors. |
Who or what are you quoting? Unclear in your first sentence premise, which was not at all what the PP claimed. |
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Many kids who are too athletes leave to succeed academically AND athletically.
If SFS won’t work with your kids training or tournament schedule and keeps dinging them based on attendance, yeah you leave for a school that will. And those exist- boarding schools, other private schools, and to public schools here. They end up at top colleges of their choice. Do you not have any older parent friends or coworkers who have BtDT? Talk to them. |
How can you gauge a class of kids’ academic seriousness? Was this done in one day of a shadow day going into 9th? I don’t have a dog here but am truly trying to wonder. If Maret’s lowest ranking college matriculation one year is a school like ODU and Sidwell’s is Montgomery College, doesn’t that indicate there are a mixes of many types of kids? I know dozens of smart kids with 4.0s that were equally shut out of both schools. |
They are doing homework to learn. It has nothing to do with what you personally perceive as 'good' 'college outcomes." There are hundreds of excellent colleges that many brilliant students will enjoy attending. Learning is the goal in high school and in college. If name dropping is your goal, then you don't really care about academics, do you? |
I can't speak to your larger question of placement, but my kid based this opinion on time in classes at the schools. This was pre-COVID and my kid was at each school two separate times shadowing (Fall and after admit). They could tell by how students interacted in class and their discussions outside of class (in between class discussions). They could also tell by how many people had done the homework. For example, a class where out of 10, 1/3 had clearly done no work at all, 1/3 had done it but probably at a surface level based on class discussions, 1/3 had done it well and were fully engaged in class discussion. At Maret this was very obvious. Granted it "could" be at the school they chose, it's the same breakdown as to 1/3 no work, 1/3 just getting by work, 1/3 did work in depth but that the seriousness of the culture at their chosen school would mean that students would mask their HW effort better in the classroom setting - and still try to participate as if they had done the work whether they did it or not. In either case, my kid preferred the more serious one. But, as I noted, they thought they could thrive and be academically challenged at Maret - so this speaks to your specific college placement comparison. I am certain my kid would do equally in placement at both. We let them choose. I think it's important they are happy with school fit. I know many families who have chosen Maret over Big 3 schools and their kids are happy and do very very well in college admissions. They were all very strong students going in. |
This is my life, homework 3 hours a night, in high school. I grow up in Asia. It is worse now. |
Ick. Why would you want to send your child here? Sounds terrible. Expensive private school does not = guaranteed success in life. |
We were told this at multiple steps of the interview/tour as well. |