Anonymous wrote:International boarding was part of the business model for that failed Intelsat school, too. Georgetown Prep and Madeira are two other schools around here with a bunch of international boarders, though I tend to assume Georgetown Prep has resources or donors who will see it through if it comes to that.
Anonymous wrote:It is always a good idea to check the 990 forms for the schools you are considering. Not all schools have them because many get a religious exemption.
My two favorite data points endowment and financial aid numbers.
How is the endowment fund total trend? I think endowments are what help schools weather ups and downs.
I also like to look at the financial aid total divided by the listed number of recipients. A healthy school will have about 1/4 of the student body receiving an average of 50% aid. Some schools might be able to swing more, especially those with large endowments.
Anonymous wrote:It sounds like the issue here was tied to 1) a very large campus that was difficult to maintain & super leveraged 2) a once-profitable boarding program that couldn't survive Covid. I don't know that any other school is in that situation. I'm sure some other schools are struggling, but not necessarily for these reasons and with this outcome.
Anonymous wrote:It is always a good idea to check the 990 forms for the schools you are considering. Not all schools have them because many get a religious exemption.
My two favorite data points endowment and financial aid numbers.
How is the endowment fund total trend? I think endowments are what help schools weather ups and downs.
I also like to look at the financial aid total divided by the listed number of recipients. A healthy school will have about 1/4 of the student body receiving an average of 50% aid. Some schools might be able to swing more, especially those with large endowments.
Anonymous wrote:Maybe I'm in a different world, but per privateschoolreview.com, the 600 students at Sandy Springs made it quite large, by local standards. Not much smaller than Georgetown Day, slightly bigger than St Albans.
Anonymous wrote:Maybe I'm in a different world, but per privateschoolreview.com, the 600 students at Sandy Springs made it quite large, by local standards. Not much smaller than Georgetown Day, slightly bigger than St Albans.