Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, I think that is why you hear folks say "Cathedral Schools," not "Cathedral School."
The usage isn't all that common outside of this board, which was sort of the point. In my 40+ years here, Cathedral has always meant NCS only. That said, I recognize that not everyone has been in DC as long as I have.
Anonymous wrote:I think of it just as an identifier "My kids are at the Cathedral Schools" (Maybe one at Beauvoir and 2 at NCS or something) while other folks say "Catholic schools" or others "Montgomery County schools." They are all 3 separate schools but there is no denying the closeness of their students. I would venture that the majority of students that have siblings would have them at one of the Cathedral schools - especially those families that started out at Beauvoir.
I never see it used if someone is only referring to single gender schools - "We're applying to Landon, Mater Dei and the the Cathedral Schools" . . . That wouldn't make sense.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I thought STA and NCS take some (not all) classes together in high school.
This is also true at Holton and Landon. Not sure about other schools, but I think this is a good thing for single gender schools.
Holton and Landon used to do this (they called it cross-registation) but do not at the moment. Getting to the other campus was too complicated and wasted too much of a student's time when Holton revised it's schedule several years ago. You had to have a free period on either side of the cross-registered class to make it in time, and very few students had that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I thought STA and NCS take some (not all) classes together in high school.
This is also true at Holton and Landon. Not sure about other schools, but I think this is a good thing for single gender schools.
Anonymous wrote:OP, I think that is why you hear folks say "Cathedral Schools," not "Cathedral School."
Anonymous wrote:I thought STA and NCS take some (not all) classes together in high school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:NCS and STA share a coordinate program that includes a number of academic classes and performing-arts productions in the middle and upper schools. Apples and oranges don't.
Apples and oranges both have seeds, but that doesn't make them easily comparable.
More to the point, almost all brother/sister school pairings offer limited interaction among the genders (not to mention socials), but that doesn't make them coed schools. A single gender environment is very, very different form a coed environment and there is plenty of research to back it up.
Anonymous wrote:NCS and STA share a coordinate program that includes a number of academic classes and performing-arts productions in the middle and upper schools. Apples and oranges don't.