| I love Sheridan School. It is a small school that gives all students an opportunity to be themselves and to grow into confident people who want to make a difference. |
| We love Holton. It’s the perfect school for the right kind of girl. Challenging, welcoming, purposeful and committed to diversity. DD loves learning there and has made some wonderful friends. |
All due respect but it looks like you started this thread as a PR/advertising move. |
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Sidwell for its diversity..
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| NCS upper school for its warm and caring faculty and admin. |
NP here. It’s perfectly fine for parents to post positive things about their schools. Any school can post. Why should DCUM only be negative? |
| The faculty at NCS (middle school) is wonderful. Our experience is very positive. |
| Field, for encouraging kids to move out of their comfort zones and helping them be successful. |
| It would be more helpful if people talked about why, specifically, the school is great for their child, instead of offering platitudes about what it does for “all students.” |
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Rochambeau. I have a DC there at the primary school campus who has been pushed beyond his/her comfort zone in public speaking and overall participation. DC performs well in coursework and exams, but barely participated through 2/3rds of the school year. As result, grades have suffered. The primary teacher’s philosophy is that one must be more than knowledgeable in life and has to engage and share knowledge. I’ve watched my child rebel against this only for something to click a month ago. DC now tries harder and preps more for such assignments. I also uncovered that this outgoing child of mine truly has a fear of public speaking to tackle. I’m very proud of DC for finally trying. I’ve noticed a difference in effort, to include voluntarily practicing at home, as well as improvement overall. I ran into DC’s teacher last week and received very positive feedback on DC’s recent improvement. My kid also came home surprised because the teacher stopped by during English class to give kudos as well.
I’d also add that I love the diversity at the lower school campuses. I haven’t noticed any SES or ethnic grouping. Other parents might disagree, but I like that the school tends to let kids figure out their own problems socially, only jumping in when certain lines are crossed. |
Um, what? Sidwell (and the other privates in DC) have to be the least diverse schools within a 50 mile radius of the Capitol. |
Plus, there's little diversity of thought there. |
+1 |
This is great to hear. We have a kid who is relatively new there. We're pretty happy thus far, although our kid also avoids speaking up (but has mades some strides). Can I ask what grade your child is in? Ours is in CE1--just wondering if kids tend to open up more in the upper elementary grades. We also love the diversity, as a multiracial/black 1st-gen/immigrant family. The other day I pulled up for dropoff and just happened to notice: a black dad chatting w/two white moms, another black dad, a South Asian dad, etc. Our kid has friends who speak various languages at home, and hail from many different countries. We think the diversity is a strength, for sure. |
| PP, DC is in CM1. Most of all of the CM1 teachers are male which is pretty nice as well. The entire class is in Quebec for 10 days and I can see from the pics that they are having a blast! |