Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I personally thought the Maret/Sidwell parent interviews were extremely wierd for a high school student. I mean, it felt very much like our family was being vetted — what did we choose to wear? What did we choose to say? Did we say Harvard or “school in the NE”? For lower school, I get that you don’t have much else to go on, but for upper school, admissions seemed to be less about our kid and more about us. Which was the wrong vibe for me. We ended up at a school without parent interviews and that set the tone for our engagement with the school. Our child deals with our child’s schooling issues first and foremost. We have not had to step in. If we do, we expect that the child would’ve tried first. It’s actually not our high school experience but our child’s.
I don't get it. They asked you these questions? I toured Maret recently. Was turned off by the whole vibe.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:But what kind of parents are they looking for as part of interview or just confirming the assessment of the child during child’s interview?
You sound very naive unless you are being facetious. They want to know your pedigree and bank account and whether you will be a PIA.
This....but maybe to add another angle....they are building a community and parents are part of that community.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Trying to understand why parents must also interview as part of school application process vs other schools require essays only or no interviews from parents? Trying to understand the logic.
They should require it. I know parents that are openly racist and anti-semitic that are at top schools. Turns out their kids are as well. Families should be screened.
Anonymous wrote:I personally thought the Maret/Sidwell parent interviews were extremely wierd for a high school student. I mean, it felt very much like our family was being vetted — what did we choose to wear? What did we choose to say? Did we say Harvard or “school in the NE”? For lower school, I get that you don’t have much else to go on, but for upper school, admissions seemed to be less about our kid and more about us. Which was the wrong vibe for me. We ended up at a school without parent interviews and that set the tone for our engagement with the school. Our child deals with our child’s schooling issues first and foremost. We have not had to step in. If we do, we expect that the child would’ve tried first. It’s actually not our high school experience but our child’s.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:But what kind of parents are they looking for as part of interview or just confirming the assessment of the child during child’s interview?
You sound very naive unless you are being facetious. They want to know your pedigree and bank account and whether you will be a PIA.
Anonymous wrote:I personally thought the Maret/Sidwell parent interviews were extremely wierd for a high school student. I mean, it felt very much like our family was being vetted — what did we choose to wear? What did we choose to say? Did we say Harvard or “school in the NE”? For lower school, I get that you don’t have much else to go on, but for upper school, admissions seemed to be less about our kid and more about us. Which was the wrong vibe for me. We ended up at a school without parent interviews and that set the tone for our engagement with the school. Our child deals with our child’s schooling issues first and foremost. We have not had to step in. If we do, we expect that the child would’ve tried first. It’s actually not our high school experience but our child’s.
Anonymous wrote:Trying to understand why parents must also interview as part of school application process vs other schools require essays only or no interviews from parents? Trying to understand the logic.
Anonymous wrote:But what kind of parents are they looking for as part of interview or just confirming the assessment of the child during child’s interview?
Anonymous wrote:I expect it usually depends on how many applicants there are. For example, Catholic schools like O’Connell are so much larger than the independent privates, they simply couldn’t interview everyone. We didn’t come across any non-Catholic schools that didn’t do interviews during our process last year, so if you e found smaller independent schools that don’t interview I couldn’t speculate about them.