Anonymous wrote:Super. All these AP classes must mean that students are graduating school in 3 years nowadays. Right?
Oh wait, 5. Because the overpaid professors only teach certain required classes in odd years,
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:BASIS DC once it finishes building out its high school grades, they will be giving TJ a run for their money.
+1
BASIS starts offering AP coursework as early as 8th grade and a student could easily end up with more AP courses coming out of BASIS than any of the others that have been mentioned.
promises, promises...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:BASIS DC once it finishes building out its high school grades, they will be giving TJ a run for their money.
+1
BASIS starts offering AP coursework as early as 8th grade and a student could easily end up with more AP courses coming out of BASIS than any of the others that have been mentioned.
promises, promises...Anonymous wrote:BASIS DC once it finishes building out its high school grades, they will be giving TJ a run for their money.
Anonymous wrote:Private schools at the high school level in no particular order: Sidwell, St. Albans/NCS, WIS (IB bilingual diploma program), GDS. Yes, we looked closely at all of them, know kids in all of them, and have kids in one of them.
I hear that St. Anselms is also very demanding but we didn't look at it and I don't know anyone there so can't comment.
Re private vs. public mentioned earlier, the schools above are rigorous in a completely different way than TJ or than Basis aspires to be. Apples/oranges.
Anonymous wrote:Seems to me the best way to evaluate this would be to know the average SAT scores for each school. That would tell you what the teachers are working with and thus how rigorous they can afford to make the classes. AP or IB designation doesn't make a class rigorous, outstanding peers and teachers who can meet them together make the rigor, regardless of what you label it. My two cents!