Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In my personal opinion, it depends on the school. I had two children that attended Nysmith (Wonderful School). One graduated and the other we sent to Rachel Carson AAP, where she is doing well. In my personal opinion, it depends on grade level. K-6, go private if you can, after that AAP (while they still exist) is ok. You do have to keep in mind that AAP is being eyed for the chopping block in the name of equity.
Not true. AAP will exist but it will look different with no center schools.
Anonymous wrote:In my personal opinion, it depends on the school. I had two children that attended Nysmith (Wonderful School). One graduated and the other we sent to Rachel Carson AAP, where she is doing well. In my personal opinion, it depends on grade level. K-6, go private if you can, after that AAP (while they still exist) is ok. You do have to keep in mind that AAP is being eyed for the chopping block in the name of equity.
Anonymous wrote:
How do you know 6 left for private?
Anonymous wrote:I would imagine that many of the stronger AAP centers would compare well to Nysmith or Basis. Mosaic/Mosby, however, is a catastrophic mess with poor academics and a terrible administration. I would choose Nysmith or Basis anyway over Mosaic.
My kid attended for 3rd and 4th grade. Kid was bored to death, frustrated that very little seemed to be taught, and felt like the entire school was a noisy, chaotic mess. I know other people who had some serious IEP violations there. There are almost no good after school academic clubs since the school administration actively impedes the formation of math or science clubs. About 6 out of the 24 kids in my child's 3rd grade class left for private at the end of the school year.