Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There is a broader range of students than other DC private schools, and it works for them.
We had DC at SAES during the middle school, and the school did wonders helping with executive functioning skills, giving us leads on outside resources.
By upper school, DC transferred to a DC private and was fine.
We did not get support at the DC private like SAES and not sure if it is a function of middle school vs upper school?
This is interesting. One of my kids could hardly get the accommodations listed in his learning plan in SAES middle school. It took a lot of self-advocacy and reminders to the teachers. He had to be a pest about extra time on tests, and frankly gave up on a lot of it. For example, he would never ask for preferential seating. I think a lot of this is teacher-dependent, though, especially given that there is only full-time one learning specialist for the school.
On the original question, SAES takes kids from a huge range of schools, even some special needs schools. Two things seem to help: Having an applying family member who excels in something (a sport, an instrument, academics, etc.) and clearly having deep pockets. It's not dissimilar from most area private schools in that regard.
Anonymous wrote:There is a broader range of students than other DC private schools, and it works for them.
We had DC at SAES during the middle school, and the school did wonders helping with executive functioning skills, giving us leads on outside resources.
By upper school, DC transferred to a DC private and was fine.
We did not get support at the DC private like SAES and not sure if it is a function of middle school vs upper school?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:SAES is fine. They have a lot of support for different learners, as opposed to the other schools referenced here in this discussion.
That's a misconception. SAES does not provide "a lot of support" for learning differences. As the mother of a SAES student, I can tell you that it barely provides the basic support in the form of its education center. The school does accept a broader range of academic ability than, perhaps, Sidwell. But, all the DC area privates accept kids with mild to moderate learning differences.
Anonymous wrote:SAES is fine. They have a lot of support for different learners, as opposed to the other schools referenced here in this discussion.
Anonymous wrote:Curious thing that stronger students were not accepted.
What is SAES looking for in an applicant?
Anonymous wrote:more similar to Bullis etc. but they do have space restrictions. We know of strong students who didn't get in and of not so strong students who were admitted
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:more similar to Bullis etc. but they do have space restrictions. We know of strong students who didn't get in and of not so strong students who were admitted
You could say that about every school in the DMV.
Anonymous wrote:more similar to Bullis etc. but they do have space restrictions. We know of strong students who didn't get in and of not so strong students who were admitted