Anonymous wrote:NP. my daughter is a freshman. Pretty mainstream as are her friends. You will have a mix of ppl. Some chill and some cut throat. One parent was recently reported to the counselor bc she was trying to play a game by starting a nonprofit and saying her kids did it. This was in the context of resume padding. But that was unusual at gds. my daughter works hard but has a busy social life.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Our educational consultant recommended we consider applying to GDS high school for our daughter. What is the culture among parents and students? Is it very competitive?
Why did they recommend gds over all others? It’s a good option for lgbtqia or very quirky students, since there is a large critical mass amongst staff and students. It also runs the upper school like a college. Get through the core in two years and take whatever electives you want plus a couple more required classes. But if your kid is mature enough to select well and do hard work, that can pay off. You can go very narrow junior year onward.
How can that be when gds students, like all other college bound students, still need to take 4 years of English, 4 years of math, etc.?
Read the Course Study yourself. the point was you can choose from tons of electives to fulfill whatever is required, especially after the core required classes are done. Your other English lit classes can be very very narrow, if you wish.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Our educational consultant recommended we consider applying to GDS high school for our daughter. What is the culture among parents and students? Is it very competitive?
Why did they recommend gds over all others? It’s a good option for lgbtqia or very quirky students, since there is a large critical mass amongst staff and students. It also runs the upper school like a college. Get through the core in two years and take whatever electives you want plus a couple more required classes. But if your kid is mature enough to select well and do hard work, that can pay off. You can go very narrow junior year onward.
How can that be when gds students, like all other college bound students, still need to take 4 years of English, 4 years of math, etc.?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Our educational consultant recommended we consider applying to GDS high school for our daughter. What is the culture among parents and students? Is it very competitive?
Why did they recommend gds over all others? It’s a good option for lgbtqia or very quirky students, since there is a large critical mass amongst staff and students. It also runs the upper school like a college. Get through the core in two years and take whatever electives you want plus a couple more required classes. But if your kid is mature enough to select well and do hard work, that can pay off. You can go very narrow junior year onward.
Anonymous wrote:Our educational consultant recommended we consider applying to GDS high school for our daughter. What is the culture among parents and students? Is it very competitive?