Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How difficult is it to gain admission during an entry year (9th grade)? My DS is very intelligent but has been in public for ES and MS. Would appreciate any insights as well as any experiences others have had recently with their DS. Thanks!
For any boys transferring in from public, be prepared for a significant jump in workload and sky high expectations for writing skills. Boys in 9th are expected to write at the level of college sophomores. Several of your classes will be taught at a freshman college level: history, biology, English, Spanish/French. Geometry is taught at such a high level that freshmen from public schools who are repeating have trouble with it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP - it is St. Albans. No apostrophe.
At least they didn’t call it StA’s.
Anonymous wrote:How difficult is it to gain admission during an entry year (9th grade)? My DS is very intelligent but has been in public for ES and MS. Would appreciate any insights as well as any experiences others have had recently with their DS. Thanks!
Anonymous wrote:My observations from the boys who were admitted from our K-8 is that they are looking for boys who will be able to handle the academics and are good at one or more sports. Even then it is tough. I have also seen a case where being great at a sport can make up for a mixed academic record.
Best of luck.
Anonymous wrote:OP - it is St. Albans. No apostrophe.
Anonymous wrote:It's extremely competitive, but definitely give it a try. In my era as an NCS student, a bunch of guys left STA after 8th for boarding schools, and a larger bunch of new guys came. This is uninformed speculation, but I personally think that coming from public could itself be a positive in your child's favor as the school builds a class.
Anonymous wrote:It’s very competitive, but you miss 100% of the shots you don’t take. Might as well try.