Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For some families anything less than cut throat environment is considered slacking off and not rigorous enough. This means students need to work their tail off every day and weekends. These families would love Haycock. If you are the more laid back type, this is hell.
Sigh. Haycock is not cutthroat. At all.
You’re joking, right?
No. I am not joking. I have had multiple kids go through the school. It used to MUCH more demanding but even back in the day I wouldn't have ever called it cutthroat.
Fair enough. Maybe cutthroat is subjective. But when elementary school starts feeling like a résumé-building exercise, I think the word is at least in the neighborhood.
DP. Do you know how silly you sound?
Well it’s true. And if you’re not adding to the conversation, maybe you should keep your opinions to yourself.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For some families anything less than cut throat environment is considered slacking off and not rigorous enough. This means students need to work their tail off every day and weekends. These families would love Haycock. If you are the more laid back type, this is hell.
Sigh. Haycock is not cutthroat. At all.
You’re joking, right?
No. I am not joking. I have had multiple kids go through the school. It used to MUCH more demanding but even back in the day I wouldn't have ever called it cutthroat.
Fair enough. Maybe cutthroat is subjective. But when elementary school starts feeling like a résumé-building exercise, I think the word is at least in the neighborhood.
DP. Do you know how silly you sound?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For some families anything less than cut throat environment is considered slacking off and not rigorous enough. This means students need to work their tail off every day and weekends. These families would love Haycock. If you are the more laid back type, this is hell.
Sigh. Haycock is not cutthroat. At all.
You’re joking, right?
No. I am not joking. I have had multiple kids go through the school. It used to MUCH more demanding but even back in the day I wouldn't have ever called it cutthroat.
Fair enough. Maybe cutthroat is subjective. But when elementary school starts feeling like a résumé-building exercise, I think the word is at least in the neighborhood.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For some families anything less than cut throat environment is considered slacking off and not rigorous enough. This means students need to work their tail off every day and weekends. These families would love Haycock. If you are the more laid back type, this is hell.
Sigh. Haycock is not cutthroat. At all.
You’re joking, right?
No. I am not joking. I have had multiple kids go through the school. It used to MUCH more demanding but even back in the day I wouldn't have ever called it cutthroat.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For some families anything less than cut throat environment is considered slacking off and not rigorous enough. This means students need to work their tail off every day and weekends. These families would love Haycock. If you are the more laid back type, this is hell.
Sigh. Haycock is not cutthroat. At all.
You’re joking, right?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For some families anything less than cut throat environment is considered slacking off and not rigorous enough. This means students need to work their tail off every day and weekends. These families would love Haycock. If you are the more laid back type, this is hell.
Sigh. Haycock is not cutthroat. At all.
Anonymous wrote:For some families anything less than cut throat environment is considered slacking off and not rigorous enough. This means students need to work their tail off every day and weekends. These families would love Haycock. If you are the more laid back type, this is hell.
Anonymous wrote:23:28 no chance you are the one who provided tutelage? lol… but seriously Chesterbrook principal had a staff role at Rachel Carson before coming to Chesterbrook so was tutelage on Xerox machine?
She came from Chesterbrook under the tutelage of their principalAnonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For some families anything less than cut throat environment is considered slacking off and not rigorous enough. This means students need to work their tail off every day and weekends. These families would love Haycock. If you are the more laid back type, this is hell.
We know people who don’t fit this profile at all who’ve been very happy at Haycock. The principal at Haycock is excellent.
Anonymous wrote:For some families anything less than cut throat environment is considered slacking off and not rigorous enough. This means students need to work their tail off every day and weekends. These families would love Haycock. If you are the more laid back type, this is hell.
Anonymous wrote:We know families that have moved for AAP and they say Haycock is a much healthier environment for their student. The communication is better, there are far fewer discipline issues, and the Haycock principal seems to like children.