Anonymous wrote:I’ve had kids at both SSSAS and Burgundy for MS. SSSAS was the far better experience both socially and academically. There is absolutely no comparison.
SSSAS has a block schedule, PE or athletics (7/8) 4x a week, an hour for lunch and recess and a daily STAT period to meet with teachers. I actually found it to be more progressive in how they teach and the projects they have the kids do. The faculty and administrators at SSSAS are much stronger than those at BFCDS and they actually teach the kids executive function skills. There are also close to 100 kids in a grade versus 25-30 at BFCDS which makes it a much better environment socially. You will find your people.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:2021 Grads went to GDA, Sidwell, SSSAS, Flint Hill, BI, O’Connell, Burke, SSFS, Saint James, German Int’l, West Potomac, Alexandria City, Wakefield, La Plata, Washington & Lee
But which one would be most like Burgundy?
It must be such a shock going from Burgundy to Alexandria City!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:2021 Grads went to GDA, Sidwell, SSSAS, Flint Hill, BI, O’Connell, Burke, SSFS, Saint James, German Int’l, West Potomac, Alexandria City, Wakefield, La Plata, Washington & Lee
But which one would be most like Burgundy?
It must be such a shock going from Burgundy to Alexandria City!
Anonymous wrote:2021 Grads went to GDA, Sidwell, SSSAS, Flint Hill, BI, O’Connell, Burke, SSFS, Saint James, German Int’l, West Potomac, Alexandria City, Wakefield, La Plata, Washington & Lee
Anonymous wrote:2021 Grads went to GDA, Sidwell, SSSAS, Flint Hill, BI, O’Connell, Burke, SSFS, Saint James, German Int’l, West Potomac, Alexandria City, Wakefield, La Plata, Washington & Lee
Anonymous wrote:We're loving Burgundy Farm for 6th through 8th grades. I appreciate how well they balance social-emotional development with academics. I chose the school for its crunchiness (the day my son shadowed there, back in April 2019, the kids were discussing the history of LGBTQIA activism) but also asked if my kid would be able to write a decent essay by the time he graduated. Now he's in 8th grade doing well in high-school level algebra and, yes, writing good essays. We'll be sorry to move on, but he'll be ready for high school.
Anonymous wrote:Not OP but also wondering as we are looking at options. How would you compare Burgundy Farms to SSSAS (which seems appealing because then they could stay through high school)? Are there other comparable schools to look at?