Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For those who don’t know, Milton Hershey school was set up by the original Hershey trust as a boarding school for high-performing, very low-income kids. Family income must be no more than 2X the federal poverty level (and the school is free) The school , managed through the Hershey Trust, is actually a primary shareholder and Director of the Hershey Chocolate Company. There have been recent rumors of Hershey being “in play” as a potential acquisition candidate from other food companies and private equity, but the deal has never materialized specifically because of the obligations to the Hershey School and Trust and the role of the Trust in the governance of the chocolate company.
This is a great school set up in a long-term and philanthropically pure way. Its structure has done what its founder presumably wanted despite the best efforts of many to circumvent it.
If you are a candidate and choose to send your kid there, go get ‘em.
No. I am familiar with this school. It started as a good thing to help boys without fathers. It entered into the system of taking in boys who have issues with the law along with boys who are fatherless and many of those families do not realize the difference until there kid is there. This is not Choate.
Anonymous wrote:If you recall the NYT feature on Dasani, a promising student whose family was living in a homeless shelter in Brooklyn . . . the follow-up was about her experience at The Milton Hershey School. Unfortunately, it wasn't a fit for her, mostly because of pressure from her family to return home. The article offers some insight into the school and how its mission, and the journalist also has written a book about it.
https://www.nytimes.com/2021/09/28/magazine/dasani-invisible-child.html
Anonymous wrote:For those who don’t know, Milton Hershey school was set up by the original Hershey trust as a boarding school for high-performing, very low-income kids. Family income must be no more than 2X the federal poverty level (and the school is free) The school , managed through the Hershey Trust, is actually a primary shareholder and Director of the Hershey Chocolate Company. There have been recent rumors of Hershey being “in play” as a potential acquisition candidate from other food companies and private equity, but the deal has never materialized specifically because of the obligations to the Hershey School and Trust and the role of the Trust in the governance of the chocolate company.
This is a great school set up in a long-term and philanthropically pure way. Its structure has done what its founder presumably wanted despite the best efforts of many to circumvent it.
If you are a candidate and choose to send your kid there, go get ‘em.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My god. What kind of parent sends their FOUR YEAR OLD CHILD to boarding school?
The average family has an income of $22k. That’s who.
Anonymous wrote:My god. What kind of parent sends their FOUR YEAR OLD CHILD to boarding school?
Anonymous wrote:My god. What kind of parent sends their FOUR YEAR OLD CHILD to boarding school?