Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. Many thanks for the suggestions. At St. Anselm's, are very strong athletes challenged athletically? DS isn't an "athletic 1%-er," but he's well into the top decile and he plays with passion. I love the idea of him playing a different sport each season (which I'm not positive he could pull off at Gonzaga or St. John's), but I'd also like him to experience different roles on different teams -- not always be the star. Would St. Anselm's offer that in a class of only 40 boys?
if you son is a very strong athlete in soccer or lacrosse then his club team will surely provide much more of a challenge than the competition that St. Anselm's varsity teams face. College recruiting for soccer and lacrosse is done through club teams not high schools, anyway.
If he plays basketball or baseball or an individual sport like wrestling or track, then I suggest you look on the St. Anselms website at the schools that St. Anselm's plays against to try to figure out whether he is likely to be challenged playing in high school. Nobody is going to choose St. Anselm's for the sports teams, but still some very good athletes have decided to go to St. Anselm's. In the last couple of years St. Anselm's has had an all-met basketball player, a DC state wrestling champion. One of last years graduates was a 3-sport varsity captain (baseball, soccer and wrestling) who was featured in a Washington Post article.
He also earned a $180,000 academic scholarship to UPenn to cover his bachelors AND master's degree. Impressive kid.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/recruiting-insider/wp/2016/05/25/st-anselms-three-sport-captain-nathan-dangle-earns-prestigious-penn-scholarship/?utm_term=.80b4112208e6
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. Many thanks for the suggestions. At St. Anselm's, are very strong athletes challenged athletically? DS isn't an "athletic 1%-er," but he's well into the top decile and he plays with passion. I love the idea of him playing a different sport each season (which I'm not positive he could pull off at Gonzaga or St. John's), but I'd also like him to experience different roles on different teams -- not always be the star. Would St. Anselm's offer that in a class of only 40 boys?
if you son is a very strong athlete in soccer or lacrosse then his club team will surely provide much more of a challenge than the competition that St. Anselm's varsity teams face. College recruiting for soccer and lacrosse is done through club teams not high schools, anyway.
If he plays basketball or baseball or an individual sport like wrestling or track, then I suggest you look on the St. Anselms website at the schools that St. Anselm's plays against to try to figure out whether he is likely to be challenged playing in high school. Nobody is going to choose St. Anselm's for the sports teams, but still some very good athletes have decided to go to St. Anselm's. In the last couple of years St. Anselm's has had an all-met basketball player, a DC state wrestling champion. One of last years graduates was a 3-sport varsity captain (baseball, soccer and wrestling) who was featured in a Washington Post article.
He also earned a $180,000 academic scholarship to UPenn to cover his bachelors AND master's degree. Impressive kid.
Looks like an amazing program, but it is not an academic scholarship. Ivies only offer need-based financial aid...no merit-based scholarships. Outside awards are deducted from financial aid.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/recruiting-insider/wp/2016/05/25/st-anselms-three-sport-captain-nathan-dangle-earns-prestigious-penn-scholarship/?utm_term=.80b4112208e6
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Potomac?
No!
"No, it's a pressure cooker"? "No, expectations there are lax"? Both? Something else?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Potomac?
No!
Anonymous wrote:Potomac?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. Many thanks for the suggestions. At St. Anselm's, are very strong athletes challenged athletically? DS isn't an "athletic 1%-er," but he's well into the top decile and he plays with passion. I love the idea of him playing a different sport each season (which I'm not positive he could pull off at Gonzaga or St. John's), but I'd also like him to experience different roles on different teams -- not always be the star. Would St. Anselm's offer that in a class of only 40 boys?
I wouldn't recommend his playing a sport each season just from the standpoint of time management and workload. That being said, if your son is a top athlete, he won't be challenged athletically at St. Anselm's.
I was a 2-sport athlete in HS. I used my season off to catch up on pot-smoking and video game playing. I disagree with PP's recommendation against playing a sport each season: a kid who loves to play should play.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. Many thanks for the suggestions. At St. Anselm's, are very strong athletes challenged athletically? DS isn't an "athletic 1%-er," but he's well into the top decile and he plays with passion. I love the idea of him playing a different sport each season (which I'm not positive he could pull off at Gonzaga or St. John's), but I'd also like him to experience different roles on different teams -- not always be the star. Would St. Anselm's offer that in a class of only 40 boys?
if you son is a very strong athlete in soccer or lacrosse then his club team will surely provide much more of a challenge than the competition that St. Anselm's varsity teams face. College recruiting for soccer and lacrosse is done through club teams not high schools, anyway.
If he plays basketball or baseball or an individual sport like wrestling or track, then I suggest you look on the St. Anselms website at the schools that St. Anselm's plays against to try to figure out whether he is likely to be challenged playing in high school. Nobody is going to choose St. Anselm's for the sports teams, but still some very good athletes have decided to go to St. Anselm's. In the last couple of years St. Anselm's has had an all-met basketball player, a DC state wrestling champion. One of last years graduates was a 3-sport varsity captain (baseball, soccer and wrestling) who was featured in a Washington Post article.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. Many thanks for the suggestions. At St. Anselm's, are very strong athletes challenged athletically? DS isn't an "athletic 1%-er," but he's well into the top decile and he plays with passion. I love the idea of him playing a different sport each season (which I'm not positive he could pull off at Gonzaga or St. John's), but I'd also like him to experience different roles on different teams -- not always be the star. Would St. Anselm's offer that in a class of only 40 boys?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I respectfully disagree. My kid at GDS has homework but doesn't stress out if he doesn't get it all done. He gets mostly Bs and is fine with that. He doesn't play a sport so he gets home at a decent hour and gets enough sleep.
Is your kid in high school at GDS?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. Many thanks for the suggestions. At St. Anselm's, are very strong athletes challenged athletically? DS isn't an "athletic 1%-er," but he's well into the top decile and he plays with passion. I love the idea of him playing a different sport each season (which I'm not positive he could pull off at Gonzaga or St. John's), but I'd also like him to experience different roles on different teams -- not always be the star. Would St. Anselm's offer that in a class of only 40 boys?
I wouldn't recommend his playing a sport each season just from the standpoint of time management and workload. That being said, if your son is a top athlete, he won't be challenged athletically at St. Anselm's.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. Many thanks for the suggestions. At St. Anselm's, are very strong athletes challenged athletically? DS isn't an "athletic 1%-er," but he's well into the top decile and he plays with passion. I love the idea of him playing a different sport each season (which I'm not positive he could pull off at Gonzaga or St. John's), but I'd also like him to experience different roles on different teams -- not always be the star. Would St. Anselm's offer that in a class of only 40 boys?