Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:13:30 again, I don’t think that any of the all-boys independent schools are an easy admit. They all have competitive admissions.
Yup! The Catholic high schools recommended are not a slam dunk for a non-Catholic. The preference is for legacies, Catholics, especially from feeder schools, and athletes. While the academic requirements for admission might not be as high as at St Albans, there are other barriers.
Anonymous wrote: Saint Anselm’s is the closest match from the academic angle. It’s probably more religious than St Albans but you could call it comparable. Where it’s definitely not comparable is on sports prowess and facilities
Anonymous wrote:Put your kid in Public school.
If they are not academic enough fot St Albans by now you have failed to educate them properly.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Georgetown Prep is the most similar. Very fancy, all-boys, and religious, but in a way most in the DMV find palatable.
Wouldn't St Andrews be a closer match?
Prep is Catholic, religiously and culturally, and that's a different kind of "religious" school.
St Andrew’s isn’t up there academically
On average, neither are Prep, Gonzaga and The Heights. The schools are set up to serve an entire community and not a narrow slice of the most academically oriented/gifted.
Anonymous wrote:13:30 again, I don’t think that any of the all-boys independent schools are an easy admit. They all have competitive admissions.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Georgetown Prep is the most similar. Very fancy, all-boys, and religious, but in a way most in the DMV find palatable.
Wouldn't St Andrews be a closer match?
Prep is Catholic, religiously and culturally, and that's a different kind of "religious" school.
St Andrew’s isn’t up there academically
Anonymous wrote:Georgetown Prep is the most similar. Very fancy, all-boys, and religious, but in a way most in the DMV find palatable.
Wouldn't St Andrews be a closer match?
Prep is Catholic, religiously and culturally, and that's a different kind of "religious" school.