Anonymous wrote:I have never heard anyone describe some innovative program that attracted them to Deal. Deal is a success because they have high-scoring kids. Hardy needs more high-scoring kids. Yes, probably more neighborhood kids. High-performing kids score well, and all of the sudden it is a better school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As a Deal parent, I would take Hardy over Deal if I had to do it again. DC is happy, but Mom and Dad are not all that impressed. There are too many students. Admin does its best to mitigate the problems, but things are not nearly as rosy as they are made to appear.
You say that, but when push comes to shove, the relative lack of advanced classes and sports at Hardy are a deal breaker for most families. Almost noone willingly picks Hardy over Deal. Most will accept the crowding as the price of a better all around education.
Anonymous wrote:As a Deal parent, I would take Hardy over Deal if I had to do it again. DC is happy, but Mom and Dad are not all that impressed. There are too many students. Admin does its best to mitigate the problems, but things are not nearly as rosy as they are made to appear.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Once Hardy ceases to be a pan-DC school and reaches 75-80%+ IB enrollment, it will be seen as approaching Deal's league. Not before.
You're assuming that "Deal's league" is something for which to be aspired. Not everyone's standards are that low. It's a gigantic zoo, and many families prefer smaller and more intimate. (No, not a Hardy or Deal family, but as someone who went to private schools I can't understand why anyone would be so braggadocious about Deal.)
Agreed. Deal is a good school, not a great school and at some point (which I think happened about 200 students ago) the law of diminishing returns kicks in. Having a middle school with 1500+ kids is not ideal. At first, the big student body works because it yields lots of per-pupil $ which means you can have all sorts of clubs and electives and sports and activities. Great. But then you also have the problems that really big schools have. The team model that Deal uses to try and make a big school feel small it admirable and creative but it's still a gargantuan school where the staff can't possibly know ever kid. In middle school, I think that is precisely the time when children need to know that they are known.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Once Hardy ceases to be a pan-DC school and reaches 75-80%+ IB enrollment, it will be seen as approaching Deal's league. Not before.
You're assuming that "Deal's league" is something for which to be aspired. Not everyone's standards are that low. It's a gigantic zoo, and many families prefer smaller and more intimate. (No, not a Hardy or Deal family, but as someone who went to private schools I can't understand why anyone would be so braggadocious about Deal.)
Anonymous wrote:Once Hardy ceases to be a pan-DC school and reaches 75-80%+ IB enrollment, it will be seen as approaching Deal's league. Not before.
Anonymous wrote:Which tells you something about the values such people hold.Anonymous wrote:Once Hardy ceases to be a pan-DC school and reaches 75-80%+ IB enrollment, it will be seen as approaching Deal's league. Not before.
Which tells you something about the values such people hold.Anonymous wrote:Once Hardy ceases to be a pan-DC school and reaches 75-80%+ IB enrollment, it will be seen as approaching Deal's league. Not before.
Anonymous wrote:Every year it seems like Hardy should be approaching the prestige of Deal, yet it never happens. Will it ever?
Anonymous wrote:Deal is 63% IB.