Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does anyone really cross-shop these?
We did. St. Alban's is closer, but we are Catholic, and liked St. Anselm's a lot for our boys. There is a bus, so that makes the location easier. Boys take the metro home and walk from the red line stop.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Inconvenient to most who would be somehow be comparing St. Albans to St. Anselm's.
For folks who live in NE DC or nearby PG County, yes, St. Anselm's is closer.
And for the poster who declared it to "be maybe the best all-boys Catholic school in the country," um, well, it's great that you are happy there.
https://www.townandcountrymag.com/society/a12008388/best-catholic-high-schools/#
Anonymous wrote:Inconvenient to most who would be somehow be comparing St. Albans to St. Anselm's.
For folks who live in NE DC or nearby PG County, yes, St. Anselm's is closer.
And for the poster who declared it to "be maybe the best all-boys Catholic school in the country," um, well, it's great that you are happy there.
Anonymous wrote:Does anyone really cross-shop these?
Anonymous wrote:My impression is that the faculty at STA, especially from middle school on, is more impressive than SAAS. I think the quality of the faculty and instruction is one of the most outstanding characteristics of STA, and my son has found that many of his high school teachers are at least as impressive as his college professors.
Anonymous wrote:Inconvenient to most who would be somehow be comparing St. Albans to St. Anselm's.
For folks who live in NE DC or nearby PG County, yes, St. Anselm's is closer.
And for the poster who declared it to "be maybe the best all-boys Catholic school in the country," um, well, it's great that you are happy there.
Anonymous wrote:Inconvenient to most who would be somehow be comparing St. Albans to St. Anselm's.
For folks who live in NE DC or nearby PG County, yes, St. Anselm's is closer.
And for the poster who declared it to "be maybe the best all-boys Catholic school in the country," um, well, it's great that you are happy there.
Anonymous wrote:Those who love SAAS tout it's rigorous academics. There is nothing wrong with that, obviously, but few would describe it as a well-rounded school. Their athletics are poor, their facilities are bare bones, the location is brutally inconvenient for most. There is not a "sister school," and most describe the social scene as, well, a bunch of academically focused boys. Again, for some, this is ideal. For those looking for a more traditional high school environment, not so much. It's not quite as single-typed as BASIS, but not far off.
STA is exactly what everyone else is saying. It's elite (and all that is good and bad with that), acadmically challenging, a bit bro-ey, has a more robust social scene, focus and support for sports and the arts and a higher price tag.
Admissions acceptance % is also night and day. Regardless of SAAS parents talking about it being "for special boys" or "only for those who can withstand the rigor," if your check clears and your kid is remotely able to color between the lines, they'll get in.