Anonymous wrote:There are a lot: Lowell, WES, St. Patrick’s, NPS, Sheridan etc. if you can pay full boat you in.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Lots of schools desperate for people. Especially so in these uncertain times.
For upper school - SSASS. Sandy Spring Friends, St Andrew’s, Bullis, Landon. None are overly religious or even religious at all.
Your options are even wider if you consider lower tier DC Catholics like Archbishop Carroll.
Lol SSSAS, Bullis, and Landon are not desperate; all have more applicants they can take. SSSAS underestimated their yield this year and the incoming freshman class is about 10% bigger than target. It’s a pain. Likely they will try to resize next year so expect it to be more competitive than typical. All three of these schools reject many applicants.
SSFS, yes, desperate, obviously, since it was pulled back from the brink of closure due to lack of enrollment and funds and may still not survive more than two or three years. I expect they will take any warm body with a checkbook.
I don’t know anything about St. Andrews.
Anonymous wrote:Lots of schools desperate for people. Especially so in these uncertain times.
For upper school - SSASS. Sandy Spring Friends, St Andrew’s, Bullis, Landon. None are overly religious or even religious at all.
Your options are even wider if you consider lower tier DC Catholics like Archbishop Carroll.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is the "all you have to do is apply and write a check" a relic of the 80s and 90s?
Most, but not all, were Catholic schools. That's not meant to be a dig, as I attended one of them (not in the DC area).
I mean this sincerely, as I'm looking for non-competitive middle-school options that aren't too religious. Options seem limited.
All school rec threads should have a required set of parameters:
Where are you located and how far will you drive?
Is your kid sporty, nerdy, in between?
Big school, small school, in between?
Pressure cooker test factory, less structured mastery curriculum, something in between?
You want to look for schools with "rolling admissions" that do still exist but usually fill a special niche of one sort or another above.
The more you can tell us, the more you may get ideas.
Thanks for this. I'm very new to the process. This would be for the 2026-2027 school year (6th grade).
Where are you located and how far will you drive?
close-in MoCo. 20 mins each way. If transportation is provided, we'd use it.
Is your kid sporty, nerdy, in between?
Sportyish, bright, but not on a gifted track. Has IEP with basic accommodations (extra testing time, etc.) for ADHD. Executive functioning is the biggest challenge.
Big school, small school, in between?
Open to any, but really tiny (staying with the same 15 kids for the entire school career) is least preferable.
Pressure cooker test factory, less structured mastery curriculum, something in between?
NOT a pressure cooker for sure. Supportive environment, strong emphasis on humanities and writing in particular.
Other things that may help:
We are open to schools designed for ADHD students, but I am under the impression admission is so competitive that he's unlikely to get in (thinking of McLean here). However, other DC is NT, so would prefer for them to be able to attend the same school.
Budget isn't an issue for the right fit.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is the "all you have to do is apply and write a check" a relic of the 80s and 90s?
Most, but not all, were Catholic schools. That's not meant to be a dig, as I attended one of them (not in the DC area).
I mean this sincerely, as I'm looking for non-competitive middle-school options that aren't too religious. Options seem limited.
All school rec threads should have a required set of parameters:
Where are you located and how far will you drive?
Is your kid sporty, nerdy, in between?
Big school, small school, in between?
Pressure cooker test factory, less structured mastery curriculum, something in between?
You want to look for schools with "rolling admissions" that do still exist but usually fill a special niche of one sort or another above.
The more you can tell us, the more you may get ideas.
Thanks for this. I'm very new to the process. This would be for the 2026-2027 school year (6th grade).
Where are you located and how far will you drive?
close-in MoCo. 20 mins each way. If transportation is provided, we'd use it.
Is your kid sporty, nerdy, in between?
Sportyish, bright, but not on a gifted track. Has IEP with basic accommodations (extra testing time, etc.) for ADHD. Executive functioning is the biggest challenge.
Big school, small school, in between?
Open to any, but really tiny (staying with the same 15 kids for the entire school career) is least preferable.
Pressure cooker test factory, less structured mastery curriculum, something in between?
NOT a pressure cooker for sure. Supportive environment, strong emphasis on humanities and writing in particular.
Other things that may help:
We are open to schools designed for ADHD students, but I am under the impression admission is so competitive that he's unlikely to get in (thinking of McLean here). However, other DC is NT, so would prefer for them to be able to attend the same school.
Budget isn't an issue for the right fit.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There are a lot: Lowell, WES, St. Patrick’s, NPS, Sheridan etc. if you can pay full boat you in.
OP here. It can't truly be that simple, can it? If so, this forum wouldn't exist.
Anonymous wrote:There are a lot: Lowell, WES, St. Patrick’s, NPS, Sheridan etc. if you can pay full boat you in.