Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I have two children who started SSSAS in 9th and they have thrived, found great groups of friends and had amazing teachers in an incredible community! Great academics- get spirit!
The parents I have met are phenomenal.
the previous post was sponsored by the SSSAS Admissions Dept...
Haha..wouldn’t doubt it! The admission office is so fake. Most of the administrators are as well.
How hard is it to get into SSSAS? The admissions office left me feeling so positive and that my DC will definitely get in. Was that the same feeling they give to everyone? Do many kids get rejected or WL?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Uh no, I know several families this past year that tried to get in after the debacle of ACPS online learning and couldn’t get spots. They did add extra classrooms to let in more students because they had the space. This is the lower school.
Niche has the school ranked high
Anonymous wrote:Uh no, I know several families this past year that tried to get in after the debacle of ACPS online learning and couldn’t get spots. They did add extra classrooms to let in more students because they had the space. This is the lower school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I have two children who started SSSAS in 9th and they have thrived, found great groups of friends and had amazing teachers in an incredible community! Great academics- get spirit!
The parents I have met are phenomenal.
the previous post was sponsored by the SSSAS Admissions Dept...
Haha..wouldn’t doubt it! The admission office is so fake. Most of the administrators are as well.
How hard is it to get into SSSAS? The admissions office left me feeling so positive and that my DC will definitely get in. Was that the same feeling they give to everyone? Do many kids get rejected or WL?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I have two children who started SSSAS in 9th and they have thrived, found great groups of friends and had amazing teachers in an incredible community! Great academics- get spirit!
The parents I have met are phenomenal.
the previous post was sponsored by the SSSAS Admissions Dept...
Haha..wouldn’t doubt it! The admission office is so fake. Most of the administrators are as well.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I have two children who started SSSAS in 9th and they have thrived, found great groups of friends and had amazing teachers in an incredible community! Great academics- get spirit!
The parents I have met are phenomenal.
the previous post was sponsored by the SSSAS Admissions Dept...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I have two children who started SSSAS in 9th and they have thrived, found great groups of friends and had amazing teachers in an incredible community! Great academics- get spirit!
The parents I have met are phenomenal.
the previous post was sponsored by the SSSAS Admissions Dept...
How so? Did they pay for it?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I have two children who started SSSAS in 9th and they have thrived, found great groups of friends and had amazing teachers in an incredible community! Great academics- get spirit!
The parents I have met are phenomenal.
the previous post was sponsored by the SSSAS Admissions Dept...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I have two children who started SSSAS in 9th and they have thrived, found great groups of friends and had amazing teachers in an incredible community! Great academics- get spirit!
The parents I have met are phenomenal.
the previous post was sponsored by the SSSAS Admissions Dept...
Anonymous wrote:
I have two children who started SSSAS in 9th and they have thrived, found great groups of friends and had amazing teachers in an incredible community! Great academics- get spirit!
The parents I have met are phenomenal.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:From their Wiki site:
The Middle School, representing grades 6 through 8, has 306 students total with the following breakdown: 97 in Sixth Grade, 99 in Seventh Grade, and 110 in Eighth Grade. The Upper School, representing grades 9 through 12, has 453 students total with the following breakdown: 114 in Ninth Grade, 106 in Tenth Grade, 115 in Eleventh Grade, and 118 in Twelfth Grade.[1]
I have an 8th grader at SSSAS now and it is a gigantic grade and has been oversubscribed since K. As of today the directory says they have 103 students, while the 9th grade has 114 (so a difference of only 11). For comparison, the 7th grade has 94 and 6th has 86. In the past there has been an 8th grade exodus for boarding schools and some of the big Catholic boys schools (like Gonzaga) but I have no idea how many people are applying out. The 8th grade is also very girl heavy, I believe it is about 2/3 girls in the grade.
Also you should talk to some current 8th grade parents re that grade as the majority of them will probably still be there in 9th. There are some strong cliques and other issues that seem to be specific to that grade, I am not sure if it is due to the fact that it is so large for SSSAS or the gender imbalance or what, but everyone knows about it and IMO it's a real problem.
Another 8th grade parent here. Agree w PP about gender imbalance which has been there since lower school and we've had a lot of turnover in the grade due to covid. Admissions could have tried a lot harder to restore gender balance in this class. I'm a boy mom and many boys are looking at boarding school, boys schools, etc.
As to cliques - there are longstanding friendships from kids that have know each other since kindergarten. That's a fact of life at any K-12 school. That doesn't mean that new kids are excluded, but there is shared history among the long-time students which is a feature not a bug.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:From their Wiki site:
The Middle School, representing grades 6 through 8, has 306 students total with the following breakdown: 97 in Sixth Grade, 99 in Seventh Grade, and 110 in Eighth Grade. The Upper School, representing grades 9 through 12, has 453 students total with the following breakdown: 114 in Ninth Grade, 106 in Tenth Grade, 115 in Eleventh Grade, and 118 in Twelfth Grade.[1]
I have an 8th grader at SSSAS now and it is a gigantic grade and has been oversubscribed since K. As of today the directory says they have 103 students, while the 9th grade has 114 (so a difference of only 11). For comparison, the 7th grade has 94 and 6th has 86. In the past there has been an 8th grade exodus for boarding schools and some of the big Catholic boys schools (like Gonzaga) but I have no idea how many people are applying out. The 8th grade is also very girl heavy, I believe it is about 2/3 girls in the grade.
Also you should talk to some current 8th grade parents re that grade as the majority of them will probably still be there in 9th. There are some strong cliques and other issues that seem to be specific to that grade, I am not sure if it is due to the fact that it is so large for SSSAS or the gender imbalance or what, but everyone knows about it and IMO it's a real problem.
Another 8th grade parent here. Agree w PP about gender imbalance which has been there since lower school and we've had a lot of turnover in the grade due to covid. Admissions could have tried a lot harder to restore gender balance in this class. I'm a boy mom and many boys are looking at boarding school, boys schools, etc.
As to cliques - there are longstanding friendships from kids that have know each other since kindergarten. That's a fact of life at any K-12 school. That doesn't mean that new kids are excluded, but there is shared history among the long-time students which is a feature not a bug.