Anonymous wrote:I am 50 years old and I have vowed never to talk to my parents again for forcing me to ho to an all boys high school. I hope for you sake that you are making the right decision. You don't have to be right when you provide a normal education environment but when you deviate from the norm, you had better be right. Academics are the nearly the same everywhere, but you will be depriving you son of a normal environment during a critical developmental stage of his life. My wife (of 16 years) and I separated a couple of years back and I firmly believe that my education in an all boys school in some way contributed to our separation and my current feeling of hate towards my parents. I would be very careful if I were you. Unless there is some reason to deprive you son of a normal high school experience I would not do it.
I am 50 years old and I have vowed never to talk to my parents again for forcing me to ho to an all boys high school. I hope for you sake that you are making the right decision. You don't have to be right when you provide a normal education environment but when you deviate from the norm, you had better be right. Academics are the nearly the same everywhere, but you will be depriving you son of a normal environment during a critical developmental stage of his life. My wife (of 16 years) and I separated a couple of years back and I firmly believe that my education in an all boys school in some way contributed to our separation and my current feeling of hate towards my parents. I would be very careful if I were you. Unless there is some reason to deprive you son of a normal high school experience I would not do it.
Reality check here. By the time your reach 50, you should have learned to take responsibility for your own actions. Blaming your parents for high school smacks of gross immaturity to me.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You're right on about those mixers. I would not consider them valuable coed opportunities, rather just big, loud, sometimes wild and pseudosupervised parties that often involve kids from several different upper schools. Coed classes, sports and arts opportunities would be better in that regard, but if that's that important to you, you'd want to inquire how prevalent those opportunities really are. Eg, if your son is not necessarily a track/xc guy or not likely to act in school plays, those coed options aren't going to do much for him. Of course, those are not the boys who could most benefit from working and learning alongside bright girls
10:40 again. How do you know boys not in coed sports or activities are the ones who would most benefit from exposure to working and learning with bright girls? Being bright or wealthy or part of the DC private school "family" crowd doesn't make a girl a lady, attractive, kind or some one a guy would want to date or consider a girlfriend.