Anonymous wrote:We are atheist but interested in NPS and st Pats because of academics. Can we fit in the community?
Anonymous wrote:Can we do rankings by category?
1. academics
2. high school placement
3. facility
4. location
5. extracurriculars
6. soft skill development
7. diversity
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:NPS
St. Pat’s
Norwood
WES
Sheridan
Lowell
Clearly, you don't value a progressive curriculum. My ranking would be:
Lowell/Sheridan
Norwood
NPS
St. Pats
WES
These all have great things to offer, but this is a wide range. I work at another independent school that’s k-12 and have friends and former colleagues at all of these places. Here’s my assessment. Lowell and Sheridan are both diverse and progressive, and walk the walk. Lowell has the nicer campus, but Sheridan has the social emotional/whole child thing down. Kids come out of Sheridan very confident and self possessed. Norwood has solid, solid academics and great outplacement. There is not as wide a range in academic needs there as at some of the other schools. Beautiful spacious campus. St. Pat’s has a lot of the same whole child magic as Sheridan, though it’s, of course, a religious school. Much more traditional. I think most people would be comfortable there regardless of religion, and they have a strong staff. WES to me is the weak link in the group here, though for families looking for a specific curriculum and who have to move often internationally, it might provide the most consistency for them out of all these schools. I’d make a choice based on my child and my family’s needs. Visit and get a feel for them once that’s possible again. A child will get a good education at any of these, so think about commute, what kind of education you want (progressive or traditional, religious or secular, a bigger or smaller school etc) and then go from there.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:NPS
St. Pat’s
Norwood
WES
Sheridan
Lowell
Clearly, you don't value a progressive curriculum. My ranking would be:
Lowell/Sheridan
Norwood
NPS
St. Pats
WES
These all have great things to offer, but this is a wide range. I work at another independent school that’s k-12 and have friends and former colleagues at all of these places. Here’s my assessment. Lowell and Sheridan are both diverse and progressive, and walk the walk. Lowell has the nicer campus, but Sheridan has the social emotional/whole child thing down. Kids come out of Sheridan very confident and self possessed. Norwood has solid, solid academics and great outplacement. There is not as wide a range in academic needs there as at some of the other schools. Beautiful spacious campus. St. Pat’s has a lot of the same whole child magic as Sheridan, though it’s, of course, a religious school. Much more traditional. I think most people would be comfortable there regardless of religion, and they have a strong staff. WES to me is the weak link in the group here, though for families looking for a specific curriculum and who have to move often internationally, it might provide the most consistency for them out of all these schools. I’d make a choice based on my child and my family’s needs. Visit and get a feel for them once that’s possible again. A child will get a good education at any of these, so think about commute, what kind of education you want (progressive or traditional, religious or secular, a bigger or smaller school etc) and then go from there.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We are atheist but interested in NPS and st Pats because of academics. Can we fit in the community?
Athiest family at NPS and we feel totally fine. I haven't meant anyone I consider to be very religious and I'm pretty involved at the school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:NPS
St. Pat’s
Norwood
WES
Sheridan
Lowell
Clearly, you don't value a progressive curriculum. My ranking would be:
Lowell/Sheridan
Norwood
NPS
St. Pats
WES
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We are atheist but interested in NPS and st Pats because of academics. Can we fit in the community?
You would be fine
Anonymous wrote:We are atheist but interested in NPS and st Pats because of academics. Can we fit in the community?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You can't rank these. We are Jewish- didn't even consider NPS, St. Pats, or WES. So for US, those three are the least desirable.
A huge portion of the NPS community is Jewish or interfaith.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can we do rankings by category?
1. academics
2. high school placement
3. facility
4. location
5. extracurriculars
6. soft skill development
7. diversity
Each number would be a different ranking
Anonymous wrote:1. Academics - all very high quality
2. Placement - depends on where you want to go but all do well. Edge to NPS because slight easier to get into 7th v 9th
3. WES and St Pats and Norwood. This is where NPS lacks significantly.
4. Location. Dependent on where you live.
5. Extracurriculars. Pretty similar. Edge to St Pats for sports and WES for music.
6. Soft skill development. Sheridan,WES,Lowell
7. Diversity, Sheridan, WES, and Lowell again.
Anonymous wrote:We are atheist but interested in NPS and st Pats because of academics. Can we fit in the community?