Anonymous wrote:How 'bout this: Occupy Sidwell! Isn't a place like Sidwell the prime symbol of the 1%????? Talk about the haves and the have-nots.
Oh, and since the President is such a supporter of the occupy movement, I'm sure he won't have any problem with a group setting up camp at the school. Right?
Anonymous wrote:''LOL! Amy Carter went to Horace Mann, in the Foxhall/ Spring Valley neighborhood of "DC" where the average home sells for 2-4 Million Dollars. Technically, 1/4 mile from the DC/MD boarder, so yes, she did go to a "DC school" however,Horace Mann with its IMF, World Bank, and upper Middle Class families in general is hardly "inner city". H.M also only goes to 5th grade and then you are stuck.''
WRONG. She went to Stevens which is downtown
Sidwell has a strong academic reputation, though it's on the decline. Has a mediocre athletic program.
Anonymous wrote:I also am a public school graduate and an Ivy college and grad school graduate, and I think the prior posters make a good point--you do not send your kids to private school because you want them to go to a specific type of college--you send them because there is some compelling reason to place them in a different kind of environment. No reason to fear the good public schools! Cream rises to the top anywhere. And I say this as the parent of one kid in public and one kid in private school--work with the information and child you have in front of you, not some future Ivy goal. And don't be afraid to make changes along the way as necessary.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In a country of 350 mm people, the fact that two of the last three Presidents chose to send their daughters there is extraordinary. And it is obviously an excellent school too.
Where would Presidents send their 6,7,8,9,10 and 11 year-old daughters if they lived in the White House (in D.C. the last time I checked) .... local primary school.
Well why on earth not? Amy Carter attended an inner city public school. The Obamas visited several schools before choosing Sidwell Friends. It was well publicized at the time. Why pretend that an amazing school isn't amazing? What purpose does that serve?