Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:St. Anselm's Abbey School.
OP, I mentioned this one, and only this one, but I cautioned that she should not get her hopes up.
If she lived in VA, TJ might have been the best fit.
BTW, she was very nice, and unpretentious.
Why shouldn't she get her hopes up? Because even it might not be rigorous enough? Here I think she can get her hopes up, because it is very rigorous. Because it is too hard to get in? Actually, I don't think it is that hard. Because, being in SE DC, it is a pain to get it? It does have buses to VA and to the Bethesda area. Maybe she should get her hopes up?
BTW, St. Anselm's is in NE DC. Is that a problem? How do you if it's hard to gain admission? Do you know someone who attend/ed?
Anonymous wrote:OP here, I don't get the impression that she ever believed that her child was gifted since he was in the middle of the pack where he came from and he never got "As" under that system, he was pushed beyond his abilities.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:St. Anselm's Abbey School.
OP, I mentioned this one, and only this one, but I cautioned that she should not get her hopes up.
If she lived in VA, TJ might have been the best fit.
BTW, she was very nice, and unpretentious.
Why shouldn't she get her hopes up? Because even it might not be rigorous enough? Here I think she can get her hopes up, because it is very rigorous. Because it is too hard to get in? Actually, I don't think it is that hard. Because, being in SE DC, it is a pain to get it? It does have buses to VA and to the Bethesda area. Maybe she should get her hopes up?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:St. Anselm's Abbey School.
OP, I mentioned this one, and only this one, but I cautioned that she should not get her hopes up.
If she lived in VA, TJ might have been the best fit.
BTW, she was very nice, and unpretentious.
Anonymous wrote:And I did not know what to say. She recently located here from overseas and put her son at BCC in MoCo and he is in all AP classes and finds it a breeze compared to his more rigorous boarding school.
She is looking for a school for her younger sons that would offer that rigor, and to be honest, I was at a loss for an answer because I am not sure that exists in the DC area.
I know that people will talk about the whole child and teaching the child how to think rather than drill and kill and so on, but I did not get the impression that she wanted touchy feely. But it is sad when I had to say that it unlikely that she would find anything to compare to what she left.
Anonymous wrote:St. Anselm's Abbey School.