Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So you told them because you didn't pay the deposit for next school year? Otherwise there was no reason to tell the school anything.
Just be gracious and patient until you leave.
This is nothing.
They need to request transcripts and recommendations in order to apply out.
Anonymous wrote:So you told them because you didn't pay the deposit for next school year? Otherwise there was no reason to tell the school anything.
Just be gracious and patient until you leave.
This is nothing.
Anonymous wrote:One of them even said “do you realize how bad this looks for our school?”
You should come back and name the place, once this is far behind you OP.
Anonymous wrote:We’re kind of in the same situation. Our current school has been non-responsive in getting our son’s transcripts.
Anonymous wrote:One of them even said “do you realize how bad this looks for our school?”
You should come back and name the place, once this is far behind you OP.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Play nice until you’ve made a deposit at the next school. Don’t burn bridges.
This - but they are behaving poorly. You might want to find a kind way to share this with HOS, division head, development, and registrar (or the person in charge of sending official transcript). << in June after you leave
Did you tell the teachers writing the recommendations and your division head not to share information with anyone? Note - at our school - the division head must review any teacher letter of recommendation - so they find out.
Anonymous wrote:Play nice until you’ve made a deposit at the next school. Don’t burn bridges.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We dealt with this when we applied out of public, the principal was vocally against it and refused to mark any school visits, interviews, etc as excused absences. The school was just short of sabotage and I had finally put my politeness away when they started missing deadlines and hound the admin and faculty to submit recommendation letters and transcripts. Thankfully the schools we were applying to were understanding and helped as well.
How did the schools you were applying to help out?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My DD is at school at the school I graduated from and that my family has always been prominent donors at (sorry to say it that way, but it’s contextual, I promise).
She decided with full support from me and my DH to apply out this year. It’s been obvious for a few years that she could get more out of a different kind of school but it’s taken all of us some guts to admit it.
Anyway, we were transparent with school about both the fact that we were applying out and the fact that we haven’t made any final choices because we don’t have choices yet. We haven’t said a peep to anyone else save for the teachers who wrote her recs and have no desire to poison the well or spread discontent or anything.
Nevertheless, I am getting a constant stream of guilt-tripping and commentary from administrators who shouldn’t even know about the applications. One of them even said “do you realize how bad this looks for our school?”. Another person from development checked in to make sure that the remainder of our pledge for the year was going to process. A 3rd person who I work with as a volunteer has been guilt tripping me and saying that if my DD switches schools and I am not volunteering anymore, x y and z bad things will happen. They’re making me feel like it will be my family’s fault if totally unrelated initiatives don’t come to fruition in the future.
I’m trying really hard to be gracious but they are not making it easy. Has anyone experienced this? If we were even vaguely in the fence, this would have definitely pushed us to leave no matter what. Which is what our plan is now anyway.
As a private school teacher this whole scenario sounds completely bonkers to me.