Anonymous wrote:or try HB or AT.
Anonymous wrote:Wakefield parent here: teachers know my kid. Kid seems to have had overlap with a group of learners. The Spanish immersion kids also are grouped together. Kid is introverted, shy to engage adults but it is working. We are very happy with the school, teachers and how our kid is learning. We also worried it would feel too large and kid would be lost in the crowd. It isn't the case.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Teachers don't form close relationships with students who are not proactive about reaching out and who don't participate in class. I have twins who generally have the same teachers, my more talkative twin has stronger teacher relationships and may get better college recs as a result. To ensure strong relationships for quiet kids, I think you really need to pay $$$ for private school. I tried to convince my quiet twin to consider private but he was not interested. I view learning to navigate a large high school as good training for college and life in general.
This is very true. A kid who can hack it at a big public is going to have a lot of good life skills.
Thats great. But what is best path for kid who is going to be quiet, lost in shuffle, and kind of drift through high school.
Its not like the big public will help prepare them for college in that scenario.
I think they would be better served with a school that encourages them to meet out to teachers, to have that interaction often, so one on one or such so that it seems less daunting.
The best path is to push that kid to get out of their comfort zone and be more proactive. It is possible that a small environment will help build those skills but it is also possible that a kid will get used to a small, comfy environment and then struggle to adapt to college and working life.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Teachers don't form close relationships with students who are not proactive about reaching out and who don't participate in class. I have twins who generally have the same teachers, my more talkative twin has stronger teacher relationships and may get better college recs as a result. To ensure strong relationships for quiet kids, I think you really need to pay $$$ for private school. I tried to convince my quiet twin to consider private but he was not interested. I view learning to navigate a large high school as good training for college and life in general.
This is very true. A kid who can hack it at a big public is going to have a lot of good life skills.
Thats great. But what is best path for kid who is going to be quiet, lost in shuffle, and kind of drift through high school.
Its not like the big public will help prepare them for college in that scenario.
I think they would be better served with a school that encourages them to meet out to teachers, to have that interaction often, so one on one or such so that it seems less daunting.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. So the school within a school thing is only for freshman year. In handbook it’s documented as Small Learning Community
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Small_Learning_Community
The 9th Grade "Small Learning Community" (SLC)
W-L specifically targets the transition to high school by organizing 9th graders into Small Learning Communities.
• How it works: Freshmen are grouped into cohorts where they share a core set of teachers (English, Science, and Social Studies).
• The Goal: This allows teachers to collaborate more effectively on a specific group of students, ensuring no one falls through the cracks during the critical first year.
They do this at Swanson (or have in some years...not sure anymore) and it's a total nothing. It might be more effective at WL.
They also have the mentorship program where upperclassmen are paired with freshmen and new transfer students to help with the transition to high school. Note sure about Wakefield, but this has been a thing at W-L and Yorktown for many decades now.
Huh. I think my Yorktown student was paired with no one ever.
At W-L it's called the Connect Mentoring Program and it is wildly popular with students. It really helps with adjusting to a large school and the higher expectations of challenging high school courses.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. So the school within a school thing is only for freshman year. In handbook it’s documented as Small Learning Community
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Small_Learning_Community
The 9th Grade "Small Learning Community" (SLC)
W-L specifically targets the transition to high school by organizing 9th graders into Small Learning Communities.
• How it works: Freshmen are grouped into cohorts where they share a core set of teachers (English, Science, and Social Studies).
• The Goal: This allows teachers to collaborate more effectively on a specific group of students, ensuring no one falls through the cracks during the critical first year.
They do this at Swanson (or have in some years...not sure anymore) and it's a total nothing. It might be more effective at WL.
They also have the mentorship program where upperclassmen are paired with freshmen and new transfer students to help with the transition to high school. Note sure about Wakefield, but this has been a thing at W-L and Yorktown for many decades now.
Huh. I think my Yorktown student was paired with no one ever.
At W-L it's called the Connect Mentoring Program and it is wildly popular with students. It really helps with adjusting to a large school and the higher expectations of challenging high school courses.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. So the school within a school thing is only for freshman year. In handbook it’s documented as Small Learning Community
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Small_Learning_Community
The 9th Grade "Small Learning Community" (SLC)
W-L specifically targets the transition to high school by organizing 9th graders into Small Learning Communities.
• How it works: Freshmen are grouped into cohorts where they share a core set of teachers (English, Science, and Social Studies).
• The Goal: This allows teachers to collaborate more effectively on a specific group of students, ensuring no one falls through the cracks during the critical first year.
They do this at Swanson (or have in some years...not sure anymore) and it's a total nothing. It might be more effective at WL.
They also have the mentorship program where upperclassmen are paired with freshmen and new transfer students to help with the transition to high school. Note sure about Wakefield, but this has been a thing at W-L and Yorktown for many decades now.
Huh. I think my Yorktown student was paired with no one ever.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. So the school within a school thing is only for freshman year. In handbook it’s documented as Small Learning Community
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Small_Learning_Community
The 9th Grade "Small Learning Community" (SLC)
W-L specifically targets the transition to high school by organizing 9th graders into Small Learning Communities.
• How it works: Freshmen are grouped into cohorts where they share a core set of teachers (English, Science, and Social Studies).
• The Goal: This allows teachers to collaborate more effectively on a specific group of students, ensuring no one falls through the cracks during the critical first year.
They do this at Swanson (or have in some years...not sure anymore) and it's a total nothing. It might be more effective at WL.
They also have the mentorship program where upperclassmen are paired with freshmen and new transfer students to help with the transition to high school. Note sure about Wakefield, but this has been a thing at W-L and Yorktown for many decades now.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. So the school within a school thing is only for freshman year. In handbook it’s documented as Small Learning Community
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Small_Learning_Community
The 9th Grade "Small Learning Community" (SLC)
W-L specifically targets the transition to high school by organizing 9th graders into Small Learning Communities.
• How it works: Freshmen are grouped into cohorts where they share a core set of teachers (English, Science, and Social Studies).
• The Goal: This allows teachers to collaborate more effectively on a specific group of students, ensuring no one falls through the cracks during the critical first year.
They do this at Swanson (or have in some years...not sure anymore) and it's a total nothing. It might be more effective at WL.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. So the school within a school thing is only for freshman year. In handbook it’s documented as Small Learning Community
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Small_Learning_Community
The 9th Grade "Small Learning Community" (SLC)
W-L specifically targets the transition to high school by organizing 9th graders into Small Learning Communities.
• How it works: Freshmen are grouped into cohorts where they share a core set of teachers (English, Science, and Social Studies).
• The Goal: This allows teachers to collaborate more effectively on a specific group of students, ensuring no one falls through the cracks during the critical first year.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Teachers don't form close relationships with students who are not proactive about reaching out and who don't participate in class. I have twins who generally have the same teachers, my more talkative twin has stronger teacher relationships and may get better college recs as a result. To ensure strong relationships for quiet kids, I think you really need to pay $$$ for private school. I tried to convince my quiet twin to consider private but he was not interested. I view learning to navigate a large high school as good training for college and life in general.
This is very true. A kid who can hack it at a big public is going to have a lot of good life skills.
Anonymous wrote:Teachers don't form close relationships with students who are not proactive about reaching out and who don't participate in class. I have twins who generally have the same teachers, my more talkative twin has stronger teacher relationships and may get better college recs as a result. To ensure strong relationships for quiet kids, I think you really need to pay $$$ for private school. I tried to convince my quiet twin to consider private but he was not interested. I view learning to navigate a large high school as good training for college and life in general.