Anonymous wrote:Op here. Thank you for these responses. To answer some questions, we are looking for schools that have a large enough cohort of kids at and above grade level that there are classes and programs geared towards them (our local middle school has almost no kids at or above grade level) . If this criterion is met, we are ok with high farms. I hadn't thought about school within school issues. Sounds like sligo and ssims might be better than eastern. Was surprised to hear favoring ssims over eastern given that the latter feeds into Blair and the former into Northwood and Blair is generally considered to be better.
Anonymous wrote:Op here. Thank you for these responses. To answer some questions, we are looking for schools that have a large enough cohort of kids at and above grade level that there are classes and programs geared towards them (our local middle school has almost no kids at or above grade level) . If this criterion is met, we are ok with high farms. I hadn't thought about school within school issues. Sounds like sligo and ssims might be better than eastern. Was surprised to hear favoring ssims over eastern given that the latter feeds into Blair and the former into Northwood and Blair is generally considered to be better.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:SSIMS is great, and has an excellent principal.
Love SSIMS too, and Forest Knolls ES. Great teachers, administrators, and community.
The one negative about Forest Knolls was that it had been very, very overcrowded. But they just had a boundary rezoning to fix that. Starting this fall, homes south of Dennis Avenue will be rezoned to Montgomery Knolls for K-2 and Pine Crest for 3-5. These homes will remain zoned to SSIMS for 6-8. Details are here:
http://gis.mcpsmd.org/boundarystudypdfs/Knolls_BOEResolution.pdf
Can someone help translate this document. For a kid starting K in a few years, they follow the new boundaries. If they are at forest Knolls they go to ssims and Northwood. If they are at Montgomery Knolls and pine crest they go to eastern and Blair? It is hard to see the markers to understand the new boundary.
Also, the new Pine Crest principal is last year's principal intern at Forest Knolls.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:SSIMS is great, and has an excellent principal.
Love SSIMS too, and Forest Knolls ES. Great teachers, administrators, and community.
Anonymous wrote:I don't think the "school within a school dynamic" is evident at SSIMS. The kids in French and Spanish immersion are in their own language and social studies classes; for everything else they're in classes with the rest of the students. I've had 2 kids there (it's our home school), and they've had friends both in the immersion programs and not.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Eastern can be tougher for avg kids not Academically driven. There are already clicks roaming the halls with no intention of graduating. If you kids can avoid them and be ignored by them they will do great. If they get involved there is risk. All schools have kids like that, eastern has more than most. Mom of two middle class kids who got two different results there. My one boy is having a lot of problems in HS with the crowd he met at eastern. He was never going to be a good student, but is dabbling in things that have long ranging damage as a 10th grader. Daughter is in a great college assuming it opens back up in the fall
Sounds like parenting is the key to addressing this. The world is full of temptations that can derail a student. Even at home, you may allow negative influences to enter through the media your child consumes. It is natural that they will gravitate toward things that match their inner compass. As a parent, if you instill the correct values in your child, their inner compass will steer them away from cliques aimlessly roaming a middle school’s hallways. Clearly most parents at Eastern managed to do this. I have faith in OP.
Anonymous wrote:Eastern can be tougher for avg kids not Academically driven. There are already clicks roaming the halls with no intention of graduating. If you kids can avoid them and be ignored by them they will do great. If they get involved there is risk. All schools have kids like that, eastern has more than most. Mom of two middle class kids who got two different results there. My one boy is having a lot of problems in HS with the crowd he met at eastern. He was never going to be a good student, but is dabbling in things that have long ranging damage as a 10th grader. Daughter is in a great college assuming it opens back up in the fall
Anonymous wrote:SSIMS is great, and has an excellent principal.