Anonymous wrote:My youngest was not accepted but she had poor IQ test scores. In retrospect, I should had held off applying as I think the bad score was a fluke. Now sure what to do next...
Anonymous wrote:DD at Big 3 school. 2 siblings. One dmitted and one declined.
Anonymous wrote:Maret traditionally fills their classes with siblings and only has one or two spots a year for the unaffiliated.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We applied our DC2 for K but were offered a JK spot as DC has a late summer birthday. WPssi score 95%, so not as high as DC1 which was 99% but not terrible. Playdate we were told DC2 wanted to play more than draw triangles, squares and write name, so attention span seemed short. I do believe we were offered the JK spot because DC2 is a sibling. Otherwise I feel we would have just been rejected. I am fine with redshirting, it was already in the back of my mind anyway.
Which school?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I've heard of one area school that explicitly tries to balance the fairness by offering roughly half the PK & K slots to non-siblings, and half to younger siblings. In essence, it's creating two separate applicant pools. Doesn't solve all the problems, but seems fair to me.
Sidwell keeps at least half the PK/K slots for new families. Other 50% of slots for alumni children/siblings/faculty children. It in effect lessons the sibling preference at the early grades of course. However, an excellent sibling student can certainly get an entry at the later grades with more of their own track record. Don't have kids there but this makes sense -- the school is desire able enough that the lesser sib preference doesn't hurt their admissions it appears.