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Private & Independent Schools
Reply to "Where do Professors Send Their Children?"
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]I'm a law school prof and we definitely have it good. Only think I can add to the question of where to send kids to school: mine are at a progressive private that gets a very self-selecting applicant pool. It's a school that often gets derided by the more uptight DCUMers as "indufficiently rigorous," which mostly seems to mean that the kids don't get enough homework, don't take enough tests, and have too much fun. As someone who spends most weekdays with extraordinarily bright young men and women from extraordinarily rigorous high schools and colleges, I see a lot of anxious, obsessive people who are all about hard work and more than a little lacking in the intellectual curiosty and playfulness department. Some of most talented and interesting students are the ones who did not come from this kind of high pressure background-- the ones who drifted around for a bit and somehow or other, God help them, still found their way to law school. I'm already confident that my kids are bright. I want them to be at a school where their creativity and curiosity will be nurtured, not their competitive anxieties. I would not send one of my kids either to Sidwell or St Albans or NCS if you paid me-- nor would I send one to any of the top-performing MoCo or NoVa publics. Too obsessively achievement oriented; too competitive. I don't want my kids to end up as miserable, highly-paid over-achieving lawyers with a raft of fancy diplomas on their walls: I'd much rather they be poorer but happier.[/quote] +1, prof here with children at GDS. While it is by no means a perfect school, we find that it strikes a good balance between nurturing intellectual passion and the realities of a competitive academic environment. That being said, I would not automatically shut down Sidwell or the Cathedral Schools. I think that depending on the child's interests and strengths (and the family), any of the schools often mentioned on these boards could be very suitable. [/quote]
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