Anonymous wrote:With my child now 2, I’m delving into the world of admissions and vigorously reading through all of the boards, threads, & groups related to private school admissions in NYC.
One thing that strikes me as odd is how much fanfare HM gets as a TT school. I’ve lived in NYC long enough to remember the horrific stories of abuse & subsequent litigation that plagued the school maybe like 10ish years ago. I am familiar with the school’s academic rigor, but what kind of culture breads such pervasive abuse? Does the passing of time heal all wounds?
I guess I’m wondering, for parents who are aware of the history, what gives you peace about applying now?
Anonymous wrote:It's hardly just an HM problem, Dalton literally employed Jeffrey Epstein as a math teacher (though I understand he wasn't very good at it and was about to be fired before he quit, and I haven't heard anything to suggest he was actively pedophile'ing yet while there). And the stories broke 10 years ago, but IIRC the abuse was mostly between the '60s and '90s which were very different times.
No school is completely safe from such things, but I see no reason to be *uniquely* worried about HM this many decades later.
Anonymous wrote:HM?
Anonymous wrote:I would look at current culture at schools and maybe the last twenty years. The only school that this is a problem for me is St. Ann’s since they’ve had problems recently. I don’t care if they’ve have a great matriculation list, it seems like their administration has poor judgement.
Anonymous wrote:It's hardly just an HM problem, Dalton literally employed Jeffrey Epstein as a math teacher (though I understand he wasn't very good at it and was about to be fired before he quit, and I haven't heard anything to suggest he was actively pedophile'ing yet while there). And the stories broke 10 years ago, but IIRC the abuse was mostly between the '60s and '90s which were very different times.
No school is completely safe from such things, but I see no reason to be *uniquely* worried about HM this many decades later.