Anonymous wrote:This is peak Episcopalian mindset. Fancy WASPs with no actual Christian values.
Anonymous wrote:The way I read it, they wanted a candidate that is bougie, not sloppily dressed or appears unpolished.
If you think any of the other privates in the DMV are different, then I will have what you're having because I could use something to help escape the reality of tuition right now.
They're all the same (look the same, dress the same, etc). It's marketing. It's not that deep.
Anonymous wrote:I agree, the luxury brand this is cringey. That said, it's an oddly apt analogy as so many parents view their kids school as a de facto handbag that they wear to cocktail parties.
Even with all of that, SSSAS is a perfectly fine school for the right kid. But, even if you can somehow get comfortable comparing schools to luxury brands, SSSAS is a the equivalent of a Coach or Kate Spade, not a LV, Chanel or Fendi.
Anonymous wrote:I agree, the luxury brand this is cringey. That said, it's an oddly apt analogy as so many parents view their kids school as a de facto handbag that they wear to cocktail parties.
Even with all of that, SSSAS is a perfectly fine school for the right kid. But, even if you can somehow get comfortable comparing schools to luxury brands, SSSAS is a the equivalent of a Coach or Kate Spade, not a LV, Chanel or Fendi.
Anonymous wrote:We’re looking at all of the Alexandria privates for middle, and I stumbled upon this posting for the Director of Admissions (from a year ago).
They list one of the requirements as
“Professional appearance and behavior associated with a luxury brand”
The luxury brand thing is really sitting wrong with me. I’m not interested in purchasing a luxury brand school. What is luxury brand behavior anyway? Is it code for snotty?
Education= High-quality? Absolutely yes. Luxury? No.
Why not just say, “professional appearance and behavior required”?
I personally don’t like that this is how they perceive themselves and what they want to attract.
https://sssas.isolvedhire.com/jobs/913031.html