Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What type of high school are you aiming for ? As long as you are in a good K-8, outplacement will really depend on the kid. For the top tier schools ( Big 5) , kids who are elite athletes, kids who are ridiculously bright ( think a kid who developed an app or won some robotics competition) , or bright kids who bring some type of diversity will do well with outplacement.
I just don’t believe this.
This was Norwood’s placement last year: https://www.norwoodschool.org/program/high-school-placement
By my count, 22 of out of the 48 kids went to a top tier school:
GDS — 2
Prep — 1
Holton — 4
Landon — 2
Maret — 2
NCS — 1
Potomac — 2
Sidwell — 5
STA — 3
People will say some of these aren’t top tier, but they’re all very strong. I don’t believe all these kids fell into the categories PP listed. How many 8th graders have developed an app anyway?!
Anonymous wrote:Is it hard for the kids to start over at high school, socially?
Anonymous wrote:What type of high school are you aiming for ? As long as you are in a good K-8, outplacement will really depend on the kid. For the top tier schools ( Big 5) , kids who are elite athletes, kids who are ridiculously bright ( think a kid who developed an app or won some robotics competition) , or bright kids who bring some type of diversity will do well with outplacement.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is it hard for the kids to start over at high school, socially?
There are probably kids who do great and kids who struggle and that might have nothing to do with where they came from. Consider schools that are 9-12 only, everyone is new in 9th.
By the time my kids were off to HS, they had several social groups from the neighborhood, school, and sports. There was always someone to reach out to, and maybe you know at least a small group of kids in the new place.
I have a current junior who went from MCPS to 9th grade in a K-12. Freshman year was hard, but mostly due to hybrid groups and Covid. Her sport (winter/indoor) was not able to have a season. She met people and found some friends, but really settled into school and her people early sophomore year.
My other child thrives on meeting people, went from K-8 to K-12 easily in terms of social life.
Anonymous wrote:I don’t understand why you’d apply for k thru 8 for midddle. Unless it’s for back up if you don’t get into a k thru 12? Why out your kid through the application process twice and make them join a class of kids who all know each other in middle school just to have to leave again in two to three years?
Anonymous wrote:Is it hard for the kids to start over at high school, socially?
Anonymous wrote:Dont do it for hs placement.
Anonymous wrote:I don’t understand why you’d apply for k thru 8 for midddle. Unless it’s for back up if you don’t get into a k thru 12? Why out your kid through the application process twice and make them join a class of kids who all know each other in middle school just to have to leave again in two to three years?