Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: I know during the tours, no parents with whom I toured asked a single pointed or critical question. They wouldn't dare. They're too afraid their kid's application would end up in a trash bin. That in itself has allowed St. Albans to be less accountable.
Oh, god, ye speaketh the truth! The worst are those parents who come up with those "fake" questions, designed to: 1) get them noticed; 2) display their intelligence; 3) allow the tour guide to blabber on.
Anonymous wrote:PP, why did you select St. Albans? It sounds like you're not pleased with the experience. Perhaps you discovered that it wasn't the right place after the fact. But have you allowed your child to continue there?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why are schools like Burgundy Farms or Green Acres or Lowell not 'good options'? Because they are tier two?
I think you answered your question.
These schools that are fiercely competitive, by virtue of difficulty in getting in alone, have been able to be far less accountable to parents than schools that are slightly easier to get in.
Yes I speak from experience of St. Albans. It is less accountable. You are walking into a rock-solid institution. Meaning, don't try to change this institution, any more than you would try to change a rock.
How do you know? Do your kids go to these schools? As for Lowell (speaking from experience), yes it is what it is. And what it is is not for everyone.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why are schools like Burgundy Farms or Green Acres or Lowell not 'good options'? Because they are tier two?
I think you answered your question.
These schools that are fiercely competitive, by virtue of difficulty in getting in alone, have been able to be far less accountable to parents than schools that are slightly easier to get in.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why are schools like Burgundy Farms or Green Acres or Lowell not 'good options'? Because they are tier two?
I think you answered your question.
Anonymous wrote:Why are schools like Burgundy Farms or Green Acres or Lowell not 'good options'? Because they are tier two?
Anonymous wrote:Not PP, but in my case, the answer would be no. I went to Harvard, and I would be just as happy to have my children attend a small liberal arts college. But when it comes to local K-12 private schools, I believe there are far fewer good options, which is part of the reason why there is such fierce competition to get into the "top" schools.
Anonymous wrote:That sounds like a great approach. I went to Princeton, purely for the name, and had a pretty miserable time. I would have been much better off in a smaller school. My best friend went to Davidson and made friends for life. That's what I'd like for my kids.