Anonymous wrote:I don't have direct experience but I recently attended an Open House for both schools.
St. Mary's was quite impressive in terms of facilities (for example state-of-the-art science lab for MS, separate cafeteria and gymnasium), administration (very professional and well-run open house presentation), and technology integration (I saw tablets being used by some middle school math students). The middle school students who gave the tour belonged to the National Junior Honor Society and were well-spoken. The overall environment in the school was very traditional, strict, disciplined and structured. I wasn't sure if that would be a good fit for my active child but maybe the structure would be just what she needs. Class sizes were about 26 kids. The school has a wide range of extracurricular and enrichment opportunities, definitely more than Blessed Sacrament but given the large school size that makes sense. From what I understand, St. Mary's has a lot of kids whose parents and grandparents attended the school.
Blessed Sacrament is very different from St. Mary's. It is much smaller with only 1 class per grade and had a warmer, more intimate community feel to it that I liked very much. It's still a traditional school. There is a lovely playground and turf field - it was nice to see the green space which is something St. Mary's doesn't have. The students also have very high standardized test scores which parents on the open house tour were invited to review. The principal said that area high schools report their kids are well-prepared for the rigors of high school academics. The principal also reported that kids go on to many schools including not only Bishop Ireton and Bishop O'Connell but also TC Williams, SSSAS, Gonzaga, Visitation, Holy Child, Madeira, Episcopal HS and even NCS. I preferred Blessed Sacrament but was worried about the large class sizes with 28 kids per class (1 teacher plus with 1 assistant for K-4). The principal said the teachers practice differentiation to address the students' different needs and I did see kids broken out into smaller groups for activities but it still seemed like a lot! I would worry about my child getting lost in the shuffle. Other minor things that bothered me - small library, no lockers for MS kids and no hot lunch program.
This poster sums it up nicely, and I agree with much of it, except we preferred St. Mary's to BS. DC is in K at St. Mary's; there are 4 K classes this year (usually 3), and his has 24 students. We are not parishioners at either. DC obviously got into St. Mary's but I'm sure only because they went to 4 K classes this year and we applied the day applications were released. DC was wait listed at BS, and DH was the first non-parishioner to turn the application in. They seemed to be considering going to two classes next year (mentioned in the waitlist letter) but later decided against it. We preferred St. Mary's because of all the things PP mentioned. We considered the size of St. Mary's as a plus, and the small size of BS to be a minus (different strokes for different folks). I worried about the lack of green space at St. Mary's, but the kids seem to make up a lot of fun games playing on the large black top (plus bball, kickball, soccer, etc), plus they also play on the small playground. St. Mary's has lots of extracurriculars, even for K students--kindergarteners can participate in chess club, Girl Scouts, Odyssey of the Mind, etc, and the options just expand as they get older. My DC is quite active and on the younger side, and DC's teacher has found ways to expend energy in the classroom by helping with small tasks and other ways to channel energy.
I don't know anything really about St. Rita's, though I've run into a couple families at St. Mary's that left St. Rita's for St. Mary's.