Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, congrats on your upcoming move. The PPs are correct in telling you to cast a much, much wider net. It is a freak occurrence for one of these schools to have an opening in 11th grade. Not saying miracles don’t happen, but cover yourself. Also, the admission teams will be very honest with you if you get in touch with them. Best of luck.
Thank you for the reply.
We have been in touch with the admissions teams, and they all said that his grades and scores are on the higher end of the range for admitted students. They said that they have a few openings, but competition is much higher than for regular admission.
He has also applied to several schools in the area, and has been admitted to each one we've heard back from.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Cut STA off your list since he isn’t good at sports. And the all boys thing is not good. I went to NCS the sister school and would never send my son to STA.
It’s very hard to get into all of these schools. I would apply to Maret, GDS, Sidwell. Maybe Burke and Field and Potomac as well. You need to cast a wide net. Bullis as a back up.
They all start well before ninth grade. The only ones that don’t are the catholic schools like Gonzaga and prep. But a lot of those kids know each other from church catholic grade school, country club, etc.
If you have not bought a house yet you could try to get a place in the Whitman or BCC districts.
Thanks for the reply.
Why would you not send your son to STA?
I understand they are all competitive, but the admissions directors at each school have confirmed his grades are at the high end of the admitted range. We also have applied successfully applied to some of the schools you mentioned, so we know he will go somewhere.
Anonymous wrote:OP, congrats on your upcoming move. The PPs are correct in telling you to cast a much, much wider net. It is a freak occurrence for one of these schools to have an opening in 11th grade. Not saying miracles don’t happen, but cover yourself. Also, the admission teams will be very honest with you if you get in touch with them. Best of luck.
Farmer wrote:Anonymous wrote:Gds roughly doubles its class size between 8th and 9th grade, so most kids would not have been there for 10 years. But entering as a junior is unusual.
PS: It's Georgetown Day School, no country.
So it would be like transferring to a high school?
I know transferring is unusual in general, but I do not want to make switching schools more difficult than it is.
Thank you for the information.
Anonymous wrote:Cut STA off your list since he isn’t good at sports. And the all boys thing is not good. I went to NCS the sister school and would never send my son to STA.
It’s very hard to get into all of these schools. I would apply to Maret, GDS, Sidwell. Maybe Burke and Field and Potomac as well. You need to cast a wide net. Bullis as a back up.
They all start well before ninth grade. The only ones that don’t are the catholic schools like Gonzaga and prep. But a lot of those kids know each other from church catholic grade school, country club, etc.
If you have not bought a house yet you could try to get a place in the Whitman or BCC districts.
Anonymous wrote:Gds roughly doubles its class size between 8th and 9th grade, so most kids would not have been there for 10 years. But entering as a junior is unusual.
PS: It's Georgetown Day School, no country.
Anonymous wrote:Gds roughly doubles its class size between 8th and 9th grade, so most kids would not have been there for 10 years. But entering as a junior is unusual.
PS: It's Georgetown Day School, no country.