Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ltitle Langley is for those who can't get into Potomac.
And for those who don't care about academics.
I am always puzzled by such statements. My daughter attended Little Langley and is now at Holton. (Never applied to Potomac, and we care deeply about academics.)
And don't you see a HUGE difference between the quality of education at Holton than at Langley?
And yes my kids have been to both schools.
PP here. My daughter was at Langley until 2nd grade. I thought she got excellent education there. Her kindergarten teacher was outstanding, the music teacher was fabulous, and DD gained lots of confidence. When applying to Holton, she got excellent scores on the ERB, which tests school-acquired knowledge. So overall, I don't know what more I could have expected from Langley.
If that is the case, why did you change schools in 2nd? Typically people vote with their feet....especially in lower school. Just curious especially since going to an all girls school in 3rd (vs. middle) isn't really as critical. Genuinely interested in why you moved if you were happy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes. We chose Potomac over the McLean public schools and are still happy several years in. We wanted a more progressive educational approach, and the class size and extras have been wonderful as well.
The pedagogy may be more progressive, but the families and student body give off a snooty vibe. We felt like McLean was enough of a bubble already so we wanted schools that were more diverse, at least in the upper grades.
Do you truly not realize what you are saying here? If McLean is a bubble, then the PS in McLean are going to be a bubble as well. Potomac School works to create diversity in its student body, as do all the elite privates, because they have the means and opportunity to do so. Public schools cannot. They have to accept the resident population. Private schools can ensure the student population represents diversity of economic backgrounds, cultural backgrounds and race/color/creed. Its one of the benefits of private school. You have more homogenity of intellegence and behavior but not of anything else because they pull from a much, much larger geographical area.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ltitle Langley is for those who can't get into Potomac.
And for those who don't care about academics.
I am always puzzled by such statements. My daughter attended Little Langley and is now at Holton. (Never applied to Potomac, and we care deeply about academics.)
And don't you see a HUGE difference between the quality of education at Holton than at Langley?
And yes my kids have been to both schools.
PP here. My daughter was at Langley until 2nd grade. I thought she got excellent education there. Her kindergarten teacher was outstanding, the music teacher was fabulous, and DD gained lots of confidence. When applying to Holton, she got excellent scores on the ERB, which tests school-acquired knowledge. So overall, I don't know what more I could have expected from Langley.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ltitle Langley is for those who can't get into Potomac.
And for those who don't care about academics.
I am always puzzled by such statements. My daughter attended Little Langley and is now at Holton. (Never applied to Potomac, and we care deeply about academics.)
And don't you see a HUGE difference between the quality of education at Holton than at Langley?
And yes my kids have been to both schools.
PP here. My daughter was at Langley until 2nd grade. I thought she got excellent education there. Her kindergarten teacher was outstanding, the music teacher was fabulous, and DD gained lots of confidence. When applying to Holton, she got excellent scores on the ERB, which tests school-acquired knowledge. So overall, I don't know what more I could have expected from Langley.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ltitle Langley is for those who can't get into Potomac.
And for those who don't care about academics.
I am always puzzled by such statements. My daughter attended Little Langley and is now at Holton. (Never applied to Potomac, and we care deeply about academics.)
And don't you see a HUGE difference between the quality of education at Holton than at Langley?
And yes my kids have been to both schools.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes. We chose Potomac over the McLean public schools and are still happy several years in. We wanted a more progressive educational approach, and the class size and extras have been wonderful as well.
The pedagogy may be more progressive, but the families and student body give off a snooty vibe. We felt like McLean was enough of a bubble already so we wanted schools that were more diverse, at least in the upper grades.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ltitle Langley is for those who can't get into Potomac.
And for those who don't care about academics.
I am always puzzled by such statements. My daughter attended Little Langley and is now at Holton. (Never applied to Potomac, and we care deeply about academics.)
Anonymous wrote:Yes. We chose Potomac over the McLean public schools and are still happy several years in. We wanted a more progressive educational approach, and the class size and extras have been wonderful as well.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ltitle Langley is for those who can't get into Potomac.
And for those who don't care about academics.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes. Lots of McLean people go to Potomac. But first you must get in. Not easy! They take 1/3 md, 1/3 DC and 1/3 va.
Don't count your chickens before they're hatched.
Not even close to the geographic distribution
That's what admissions told me for K.
And 50/50 boys girls.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes. Lots of McLean people go to Potomac. But first you must get in. Not easy! They take 1/3 md, 1/3 DC and 1/3 va.
Don't count your chickens before they're hatched.
Not even close to the geographic distribution
That's what admissions told me for K.
And 50/50 boys girls.