.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Our daughter had an ok experience, but would not call it great. The marketing, the campus facilities, the image they create is amazing, but the reality isn't as bright. Yes, the academics were strong though not as challenging as the school our son went to. College Counseling and placement is very strong, one of Stone Ridge's top points.
The challenges are that some strong cliques / dynamics / personalities shape the culture . Yes, our daughter was able to find her small supportive group - but still you deal with the whole grade. HOS consistently unimpressive as a leader - which usually doesn't matter that much to a student's day to day experience, but SR handled Covid worse than most schools and with many big things, HOS is just slightly off. Re the comments on CRT, yes CRT was over the top. The irony is SR doesn't see how the diversity push is in contrast to how things actually run - / clique wise / administration wise / alumni - country club parents who drive a lot. As my daughter said, they push "diversity", yet they want everyone to be similar and think the same.
Interesting how different our perceptions can be … I think the HOS is amazing and impressive. She is nice to everyone. She is very hands on, she led the fund raising for the many campus improvements needed, oversaw a very intelligent renovation of campus that makes excellent use of the space, and has spiritual depth. No one is perfect but she clearly cares deeply about the school and the girls.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
What’s the DEI insanity?
They went all-in on CRT last year but seem to have backed off somewhat from the cliff edge.
I'm sure the Virginia election result will make them back off even more.
Well that's a deal killer. Not getting my money
Anonymous wrote:Our daughter had an ok experience, but would not call it great. The marketing, the campus facilities, the image they create is amazing, but the reality isn't as bright. Yes, the academics were strong though not as challenging as the school our son went to. College Counseling and placement is very strong, one of Stone Ridge's top points.
The challenges are that some strong cliques / dynamics / personalities shape the culture . Yes, our daughter was able to find her small supportive group - but still you deal with the whole grade. HOS consistently unimpressive as a leader - which usually doesn't matter that much to a student's day to day experience, but SR handled Covid worse than most schools and with many big things, HOS is just slightly off. Re the comments on CRT, yes CRT was over the top. The irony is SR doesn't see how the diversity push is in contrast to how things actually run - / clique wise / administration wise / alumni - country club parents who drive a lot. As my daughter said, they push "diversity", yet they want everyone to be similar and think the same.
Anonymous wrote:Our daughter had an ok experience, but would not call it great. The marketing, the campus facilities, the image they create is amazing, but the reality isn't as bright. Yes, the academics were strong though not as challenging as the school our son went to. College Counseling and placement is very strong, one of Stone Ridge's top points.
The challenges are that some strong cliques / dynamics / personalities shape the culture . Yes, our daughter was able to find her small supportive group - but still you deal with the whole grade. HOS consistently unimpressive as a leader - which usually doesn't matter that much to a student's day to day experience, but SR handled Covid worse than most schools and with many big things, HOS is just slightly off. Re the comments on CRT, yes CRT was over the top. The irony is SR doesn't see how the diversity push is in contrast to how things actually run - / clique wise / administration wise / alumni - country club parents who drive a lot. As my daughter said, they push "diversity", yet they want everyone to be similar and think the same.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
What’s the DEI insanity?
They went all-in on CRT last year but seem to have backed off somewhat from the cliff edge.
I'm sure the Virginia election result will make them back off even more.
Anonymous wrote:Our daughter had an ok experience, but would not call it great. The marketing, the campus facilities, the image they create is amazing, but the reality isn't as bright. Yes, the academics were strong though not as challenging as the school our son went to. College Counseling and placement is very strong, one of Stone Ridge's top points.
The challenges are that some strong cliques / dynamics / personalities shape the culture . Yes, our daughter was able to find her small supportive group - but still you deal with the whole grade. HOS consistently unimpressive as a leader - which usually doesn't matter that much to a student's day to day experience, but SR handled Covid worse than most schools and with many big things, HOS is just slightly off. Re the comments on CRT, yes CRT was over the top. The irony is SR doesn't see how the diversity push is in contrast to how things actually run - / clique wise / administration wise / alumni - country club parents who drive a lot. As my daughter said, they push "diversity", yet they want everyone to be similar and think the same.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Every IS in the DMV is recalibrating approach to DEI. Incredibly tricky, as the VA governor's race has borne out. In the end, SR, like lots of schools, is working to figure out what steps it can take to make ALL its students feel seen and valued. I applaud this work, as it is challenging and quite the minefield. SR is working hatd to find a path in line with its mission.
DEI is one thing, CRT is quite another.
You don't solve one issue by creating another.
Besides, the idea of lack of privilege in an expensive private school is fairly ridiculous.
Anonymous wrote:Every IS in the DMV is recalibrating approach to DEI. Incredibly tricky, as the VA governor's race has borne out. In the end, SR, like lots of schools, is working to figure out what steps it can take to make ALL its students feel seen and valued. I applaud this work, as it is challenging and quite the minefield. SR is working hatd to find a path in line with its mission.
Anonymous wrote:
What’s the DEI insanity?