Anonymous wrote:If your kid is an eloper, don't send them to an outdoor school. I do think it is strange they are sleeping outside, but, I don't have a kid there, so maybe it had been working well.
Anonymous wrote:Since nobody here has any actual experience with the school or its shutdown, I'll just note that as a current and longtime parent, the school and its teachers are wonderful and innovative. There is a strong tradition many places in the world of outdoor education, and we have been so pleased that Crossway makes it one option - of many! - in our diverse area. While the shutdown is unfortunate and the administration has had various hiccups over the years, the constant has been minimal staff turnover, great education, and a warm environment. Childcare and early childcare education are difficult lines of business.
This board is really nasty but search-optimized, so I write this in hopes that future prospective parents interested in Montessori and/or outdoor education decide to take a real look at Crossway rather than credit these admittedly uninformed comments.
Anonymous wrote:Since nobody here has any actual experience with the school or its shutdown, I'll just note that as a current and longtime parent, the school and its teachers are wonderful and innovative. There is a strong tradition many places in the world of outdoor education, and we have been so pleased that Crossway makes it one option - of many! - in our diverse area. While the shutdown is unfortunate and the administration has had various hiccups over the years, the constant has been minimal staff turnover, great education, and a warm environment. Childcare and early childcare education are difficult lines of business.
This board is really nasty but search-optimized, so I write this in hopes that future prospective parents interested in Montessori and/or outdoor education decide to take a real look at Crossway rather than credit these admittedly uninformed comments.
Anonymous wrote:Since nobody here has any actual experience with the school or its shutdown, I'll just note that as a current and longtime parent, the school and its teachers are wonderful and innovative. There is a strong tradition many places in the world of outdoor education, and we have been so pleased that Crossway makes it one option - of many! - in our diverse area. While the shutdown is unfortunate and the administration has had various hiccups over the years, the constant has been minimal staff turnover, great education, and a warm environment. Childcare and early childcare education are difficult lines of business.
This board is really nasty but search-optimized, so I write this in hopes that future prospective parents interested in Montessori and/or outdoor education decide to take a real look at Crossway rather than credit these admittedly uninformed comments.
Anonymous wrote:I see the inspection reports but how do you know it’s closed down?
Anonymous wrote:This place would be a great book.
Anonymous wrote:They had the first charter school and got shut down. They also had a housing program that got shut down. Lots of accusations over the years.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If your kid is an eloper, don't send them to an outdoor school. I do think it is strange they are sleeping outside, but, I don't have a kid there, so maybe it had been working well.
I can say with certainty that some parents sent their kids there BECAUSE everything was supposed to be outside, although I wasn’t aware of the napping situation. But their extensive Covid precautions was a big selling point in this community.
They should have done their homework on the history of this place and used common sense that napping in the freezing cold is miserable and portable heaters is unsafe. They may have changed to outdoor but they were never an outdoor school.
Anonymous wrote:They made children nap outside next to propane heaters? WTAF? No wonder the kids decided to go home.
It continues to amaze me how adults throw common sense out the window in the name of "COVID safety".