Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Fox Mill and Carson aren’t really Herndon either. The bad Herndon is Herndon High School. Avoid that pyramid.
Do you know this from experience or are you perpetuating stories?
Do you really need to ask?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Fox Mill and Carson aren’t really Herndon either. The bad Herndon is Herndon High School. Avoid that pyramid.
Do you know this from experience or are you perpetuating stories?
Anonymous wrote:Fox Mill and Carson aren’t really Herndon either. The bad Herndon is Herndon High School. Avoid that pyramid.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Unless a Catholic education is really important to you, you are better off living in 20171 and attending one of the publics there. No point in spending the money. The Catholic schools are good for language arts but not as much for math or science. One of our kids attended Catholic elementary for a couple years (different school but same diocese) and they were behind on math when they got to FCPS. Science and art both seemed like a joke compared to our FCPS elementary.
Agree with this. We did st joes for a year and the math and science were very weak. Plus the behavior was worse than public. Moved back to FCPS. Kids from st joes tend to go to PVI, DJO and Gonzaga. It is a very Catholic track school.
Anonymous wrote:I have kids currently in ES, MS and HS in the Herndon pyramid. We love it and find the quality of instruction to be very high. Teacher and admin engagement especially at the ES level is excellent. The MS principal is also excellent. Herndon usually only gets a bad rap from the people who don't know what it's like to actually live in Herndon or attend our schools. They see a high FARMS rate and assume that our schools are overrun by MS-13. HHS is really not that different from any other FCPS high school. There are challenges but not really any more than at any other school. My high-school aged kids have been largely unaffected by any negative incidents or issues at HHS - they don't see it and I don't hear about it.
As far as St. Joes, there are a lot of kids who go through St. Joes and then end up at HHS. From my observation, many of these kids are smart, but they have not received as rigorous a curriculum as the public school kids and while they have the capacity to do well, usually aren't the most advanced kids in their class. From hearing the parents talk about their experiences, I hear a lot about rigor meaning lots of homework and doing a lot of work outside of school, but not about a lot of advanced thinking.
We also know several non-religious parents who send their kids to St Joes because there are more conservative-leaning families there and they feel more comfortable with like-minded people whereas the general area in Herndon trends more blue.
Anonymous wrote:My kids went to St Joes and then to Herndon High. It took them some time to learn the ins and outs of Herndon, but they did well. They made lots of friends, joined clubs, played sports. They were prepared academically as well. Their SJS classmates that went to PVI or DJO did not have better college placements. Add to that, their friends lived close by and they got a taste of the “real world”. We would do do path for our kids all over again
Anonymous wrote:Unless a Catholic education is really important to you, you are better off living in 20171 and attending one of the publics there. No point in spending the money. The Catholic schools are good for language arts but not as much for math or science. One of our kids attended Catholic elementary for a couple years (different school but same diocese) and they were behind on math when they got to FCPS. Science and art both seemed like a joke compared to our FCPS elementary.