Anonymous wrote:I am not Jewish but I think that Schechter has a solid academic reputation and the kids transfer out to many schools when it ends at 8th grade or before. I've been impressed with the kids that I've met from there.
Like others, I've seen kids flow pretty freely across the Baltimore private schools. My neighbor who is on the board at Calvert seems to think that McDonough has the tightest admissions at the moment but lots of my kids from my neighborhood still seem to be admitted at grades other than k.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You can always switch for middle or upper school if the fit isn't good.
This is something I've thought about as well. McDonogh is so well respected that if it ends up not being a good fit, I'm pretty sure DS would have good chances to get into other schools.
This is true among many of the Baltimore privates. The majority of my children's classes have stuck with the school they began in, with some increased movement for middle and upper school. There are kids from Friends lower who end up at Gilman middle, kids from Bryn Mawr middle who end up at McDonogh upper. The schools are also excellent about working with parents to find appropriate placement for children. One of my youngest's good friends left McDonogh because it wasn't a good fit, but is thriving at my youngest's school. The younger brother of another has moved from Gilman to Friends. There is no stigma and it just means the kids have someone who can introduce them to other kids at the mixers and sporting events.
We are also considering two of the Jewish schools (Krieger Schechter and Beth Tfiloh), and I'm not convinced that they are in the same league academically with respect to transferring. Some kids from those schools do very well academically and could transfer out, but it's not as safe of an assumption. Perhaps I am off base in this regard though. Basically, I think it would be no problem to switch from McDonogh to Schechter/BT, but it would not necessarily be as easy to switch from Schechter/BT to McDonogh (or Gilman, Friends, etc.).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You can always switch for middle or upper school if the fit isn't good.
This is something I've thought about as well. McDonogh is so well respected that if it ends up not being a good fit, I'm pretty sure DS would have good chances to get into other schools.
This is true among many of the Baltimore privates. The majority of my children's classes have stuck with the school they began in, with some increased movement for middle and upper school. There are kids from Friends lower who end up at Gilman middle, kids from Bryn Mawr middle who end up at McDonogh upper. The schools are also excellent about working with parents to find appropriate placement for children. One of my youngest's good friends left McDonogh because it wasn't a good fit, but is thriving at my youngest's school. The younger brother of another has moved from Gilman to Friends. There is no stigma and it just means the kids have someone who can introduce them to other kids at the mixers and sporting events.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You can always switch for middle or upper school if the fit isn't good.
This is something I've thought about as well. McDonogh is so well respected that if it ends up not being a good fit, I'm pretty sure DS would have good chances to get into other schools.
Anonymous wrote:You can always switch for middle or upper school if the fit isn't good.
Anonymous wrote:NP, the focus on athletics is recent. I don't think there are a ton of "home grown" athletes, McDonogh is known to recruit for its teams at the middle/high school level. For the last few years, most of the varsity sports teams have gone undefeated. I'd be more concerned that my kid would be shut out of most of the teams. That said, I would be surprised if that trickled down to the lower school level. If you got in and liked the school, give it a try. You can always switch for middle or upper school if the fit isn't good.