| DCUM = Sidwell bashing club, just some of the recent multi-page threads have fallen off the first page. |
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What's with the troll, "Is Georgetown Day's Reputation Merited," when the question has NOTHING to do with this?
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+ GDS bashing club + Beauvoir bashing club It's so predictable. |
yes, I have kids @ one of these schools and pretty much agree. The Beauvoir-GDS bashes are usually polar opposites. Beauvoir focus on uptight moms in preppy clothes and riding boots with daughters sporting bows in their blonde hair. GDS bashers vary from snide comments about Jews to Georgetown "Drug" School. Sidwell sneers range from sex scandals to Obama outrages. |
| +Landon bashing is just constructive criticism |
I agree with this 100%, my DD is the straight laced student op describes and the school is a great fit. People always think the school is so out there, but the education is excellent. Recently just had PT conferences at the HS and teachers constantly refer to the fact that GDS students are always striving for those perfect grades and are eager to learn. |
I guess that would be hard for a narrow minded person to grasp |
Your are really agreeing with this moron, I pity your kids. |
The children do respect their teachers. My child and her AP French class had an extremely tough French teacher who assigned a lot of work and really challenged them. At the end of the year, thanked her for preparing them ALL to do well on the AP exam. These teens appreciate their teachers in a mature way that shows respect, unlike a lot of students that may feel the teacher is out to get them if they pile on work. You cannot pass judgement if you have not experienced it just because the old way is the right way in your mind. |
And it does not make you right. |
I am not sure what you are basing your view of wimpy coddled students on, but I would never want my child to work for someone who expresses a blind opinion on hearsay rather than checking the facts for himself. All the students I have met are intelligent and very respectful. None have been labelled bullies or served time for murder. Your idea of a well rounded kid does not mesh with mine. |
| What is the largest on the plans for the GDS combined campus? |
| GDS is best for the kind of student who is a self-starter, who can find his/her own way through the material, and who can really get into a project and go above and beyond what is explicitly required and or do it his/her own way. A student who prefers a more "traditional" model of having the material presented by the teacher, along clear instructions about how to go about the work, isn't likely to be as happy there. |
I would have (and, in fact, did) say that before HS. What I've learned is that (from about 8th grade on) GDS can be hellish for the above-and-beyond kid. When sky's the limit for many assignments and you have multiple interests/academic strengths, then it's an endless morass of work. I suppose you could say that it prepares kids for real life (but most real life I've seen doesn't look like that and, when it does, something's usually wrong). There's a soul-crushing element to it all and very little time for intellectual free play and exploration. Now I'd say that GDS is best for the kind of kid who is willing to blow off things s/he doesn't care about. It's not just self-starting that's called for, but self-stopping. So maybe self-direction is a better characterization. And the fact that GDS is a good fit for your kid in L/MS isn't a sign that it's the right HS. FWIW, I'm not talking "success" here but what it costs in this kind of environment and how it shapes kids and their attitudes toward school. |
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Good clarification, PP. My DD's experience was in lower school.
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