Anonymous wrote:I draw the line at portmanteaus as a school name.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes!!! This is the only private school that we are considering. Our son has been going to ideaventions camps for years and we have been thoroughly impressed. Before you drink the Kool-Aid, send your child to a camp to see if he/she would enjoy the experience.
Our son was accepted and he will be attending Ideaventions in the fall. Regarding the admissions process, our child had to take an administered IQ test, provide recommendation letters, and “participate” in class (it was virtual).
I do not understand the vitriol that some people have towards the school and it’s founders. Everybody that we have interacted with at the school has been lovely; I am especially impressed by the founders who care about providing the best education and experience for each child.
Again, I recommend that if this is a school that you are considering, enroll your child in a camp or two to see if it would be a good fit and talk to other parents.
Anonymous wrote:Yes!!! This is the only private school that we are considering. Our son has been going to ideaventions camps for years and we have been thoroughly impressed. Before you drink the Kool-Aid, send your child to a camp to see if he/she would enjoy the experience.
Anonymous wrote:We have looked into it for our 2E daughter (dyslexia). We decided it would not be a good fit for her combination of talents/challenges. For one thing, I felt like there was too much of an emphasis and reward system for “fast” and “competition” — not meeting each child individually and moving them forward but putting them against one another in a friendly (if it works for you) or frantic (if it does not) environment. Also, they did not have generally accepted dyslexia-friendly foreign language options like American Sign Language. So I felt DD would be more hamstrung by her challenges than set free to explore her math/science strengths, if that makes sense. I do love tons of what they do, and I really like them as individuals, and I am rooting for them, but even though I keep trying to go back and give it another chance, I keep walking away thinking, “Yeah, that’s right, that is why I thought it wasn’t right last time too.”But I feel like I am like a fan girl or something because I do really really want to like them so much!!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I thought advertisements were discouraged on these threads.
Go peddle your stupid school idea somewhere else, OP.
OP here. I am not advertising. My kids are age 5 and under and looking into various neighborhoods in VA. We live in Alexandria and ok with elementary schools until middle school. There seem to be a ton of great private high schools but very limited middle schools.
Nysmith is an excellent choice. Our son goes there.
But I feel like I am like a fan girl or something because I do really really want to like them so much!! Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I thought advertisements were discouraged on these threads.
Go peddle your stupid school idea somewhere else, OP.
OP here. I am not advertising. My kids are age 5 and under and looking into various neighborhoods in VA. We live in Alexandria and ok with elementary schools until middle school. There seem to be a ton of great private high schools but very limited middle schools.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My guess is someone did not like the middle school choice for AAP of Luther Jackson.
PP: And just to be clear, my DD is a 7th grader at LJ, and we are happy. Plus, this may be the only time in her life that she spends time (PE mostly) with people not in the upper middle class.
Anonymous wrote:Is that a checkbook you have? Yes, your child is gifted!!!
Oakton has plenty of good public schools with resources for smart kids. I don't get why people pay for these silly private gifted schools.
Anonymous wrote:My kids are young but we are looking to move in the near future. Just wondering what others thought of the idea of a small middle school for gifted middle school students.
http://www.ideaventionsacademy.org/