Anonymous wrote:We have a recent Bullis graduate and it's a great school. Our child switched from public, and I was worried about the wealth and privilege, but our child found friends who werent what I imagined would be a typical Bullis kid. And I mad apparently friends who didn't fit the image I created in my mind as well. Bullis isn't only about athletics - Bullis has an amazing arts program from music to dance to theatre
Anonymous wrote:Totally different types of schools. Go on a tour and you’ll feel the difference. St Andrew’s is Episcopalian and will have a few theology classes to take and is a high performing school, which has become more so in the past decade. Smaller class sizes. I really liked the school a lot. Bullis screams money and has everything possible. To me it seemed like it was perfect on the outside but hollow on the inside.
Anonymous wrote:Totally different types of schools. Go on a tour and you’ll feel the difference. St Andrew’s is Episcopalian and will have a few theology classes to take and is a high performing school, which has become more so in the past decade. Smaller class sizes. I really liked the school a lot. Bullis screams money and has everything possible. To me it seemed like it was perfect on the outside but hollow on the inside.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Bullis has about 50% more students than SAES. SAES is Episcopal; Bullis is completely secular. Bullis says sports is not the emphasis of the school, but I don't buy it. The schools feel very different when you visit them IME.
After visiting both these past 2 weeks, it was a hard no for me on both. We are a Sandy Spring family and there's a reason we chose that school to begin with which is why all this uncertainty absolutely stinks. Neither Bullis nor St. Andrews came close to matching what we love/loved about SSFS. I'm not saying these aren't fine schools. It's a matter of perspective based on knowing your kid and your perspectives on learning and education. For us - no. We are hoping to feel more confident in SSFS so we can return. However, we continue to look for something that comes closer to what SSFS was about and offering.
We had the 100% opposite feeling. We went to St. Andrew's and came away really impressed with how just fundamentally nice everyone was, were impressed with the curriculum, and appreciated how thoughtful they were in terms of teaching philosophy. I'm not sure if there will be space for my DS and in particular always loved the teaching staff at SSFS so it's a bummer to have to be looking. But if DS gets into St. Andrew's, we'd be very happy to send him. Haven't been to Bullis.
St. Andrew's puts on a good show, but the school is nothing like it is marketed. The teachers are very average, and the student body isn't really that "friendly."
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Bullis has about 50% more students than SAES. SAES is Episcopal; Bullis is completely secular. Bullis says sports is not the emphasis of the school, but I don't buy it. The schools feel very different when you visit them IME.
After visiting both these past 2 weeks, it was a hard no for me on both. We are a Sandy Spring family and there's a reason we chose that school to begin with which is why all this uncertainty absolutely stinks. Neither Bullis nor St. Andrews came close to matching what we love/loved about SSFS. I'm not saying these aren't fine schools. It's a matter of perspective based on knowing your kid and your perspectives on learning and education. For us - no. We are hoping to feel more confident in SSFS so we can return. However, we continue to look for something that comes closer to what SSFS was about and offering.
We had the 100% opposite feeling. We went to St. Andrew's and came away really impressed with how just fundamentally nice everyone was, were impressed with the curriculum, and appreciated how thoughtful they were in terms of teaching philosophy. I'm not sure if there will be space for my DS and in particular always loved the teaching staff at SSFS so it's a bummer to have to be looking. But if DS gets into St. Andrew's, we'd be very happy to send him. Haven't been to Bullis.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Bullis has about 50% more students than SAES. SAES is Episcopal; Bullis is completely secular. Bullis says sports is not the emphasis of the school, but I don't buy it. The schools feel very different when you visit them IME.
After visiting both these past 2 weeks, it was a hard no for me on both. We are a Sandy Spring family and there's a reason we chose that school to begin with which is why all this uncertainty absolutely stinks. Neither Bullis nor St. Andrews came close to matching what we love/loved about SSFS. I'm not saying these aren't fine schools. It's a matter of perspective based on knowing your kid and your perspectives on learning and education. For us - no. We are hoping to feel more confident in SSFS so we can return. However, we continue to look for something that comes closer to what SSFS was about and offering.
Anonymous wrote:Bullis has about 50% more students than SAES. SAES is Episcopal; Bullis is completely secular. Bullis says sports is not the emphasis of the school, but I don't buy it. The schools feel very different when you visit them IME.