| Looks like a little under 15% of the class of '16 is attending Ivy's, going off of that list, but I don't think enrolling students in super competitive undergraduate programs is a driving part of their mission. |
I have heard from a SAAS parent that their are typically a number of grads each year that turn down Ivy acceptances and instead choose to accept substantial merit scholarships to excellent (but non-Ivy) undergraduate programs. |
| Was there for the 1st time last month. What a dump. |
| Queue the troll. This post was far too civil apparently |
Yeah right! That makes total sense! |
| It does make sense if you are in a family that can't afford to spend $65k a year but don't qualify for FA. |
| That's us for sure! Our SAAS son will go to a solid college but we aren't going to leverage our future retirement to make it happen. |
This sums it up perfectly. In fact, the placement office actively councils these boys not to go into great debt for a "name" especially when aid is aid is available. |
| How hard is it to get in, competition-wise? |
Actually, there have been considerably fewer than 30 graduates in recent years. Last year's class was maybe 15 kids, and this year's is in the twenties. It's a REALLY small school. And it is absolutely the case that the kids turn down Ivies for cost reasons. There was just an article in the post about a senior who was going to go to Notre Dame until he received a full merit scholarship to the University of Pennsylvania in a special program for undergrad plus masters degree in four years -- in microbiology, I believe. There are far fewer wealthy families able to pay full-fare at an expensive private school, and that factor drives where the boys matriculate. |
If your kid scores well on their test, he will get in. It is not a school that has to turn away qualified applicants. |
| For middle school admissions the school is typically looking for 95th percentile or higher on their OLSAT/SCAT test. This is not an official admissions office policy, but is what I was told by someone inside the school. |
You are actually wrong about this. There were two kids who went to Brown in 2014 alone and kids go to Penn each year. For such a small graduating class they have impressive college placement with a much higher percentage going to Ivies. |
Actually I counted 35 kids in this year's graduating class from the Parish Times article linked in this thread. I have heard the school is looking to get to 40 per grade for high school. |
| 34 this year. And more than twice the size of last year. Yes, the school is looking to expand slightly the size of the classes. But they only take boys they think will succeed. |