Anonymous wrote:No, some people actually choose GDS over Sidwell. Why? The vibe has gotten seriously arrogant and obnoxious at Sidwell in the last 10 years. Admissions is fully aware of the influx of parents who have little respect for Quaker beliefs. The school itself has come far from its Quaker roots.
GDS students, while facing as rigorous an academic curriculum -- arguably better in the math and sciences -- as Sidwell, enjoy their studies more and are less freaked out that the students at Sidwell. Because of the high status name brand, a lot of controlling, Tiger parents [Ivy or bust] send their children to Sidwell.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I grew up here in the 80s and 90s and I agree. GDS was nbd. It had no reputation at all. It wasn’t on people’s radar.
Disagree! I remember it being the “cool” school where the kids had freedom and could call teachers by their first name. It was seen as progressive/non-traditional, at least this was my POV as a kid who didn’t attend. A school that kids liked but parents not so much!
Anonymous wrote:I grew up here in the 80s and 90s and I agree. GDS was nbd. It had no reputation at all. It wasn’t on people’s radar.
Anonymous wrote:No, some people actually choose GDS over Sidwell. Why? The vibe has gotten seriously arrogant and obnoxious at Sidwell in the last 10 years. Admissions is fully aware of the influx of parents who have little respect for Quaker beliefs. The school itself has come far from its Quaker roots.
GDS students, while facing as rigorous an academic curriculum -- arguably better in the math and sciences -- as Sidwell, enjoy their studies more and are less freaked out that the students at Sidwell. Because of the high status name brand, a lot of controlling, Tiger parents [Ivy or bust] send their children to Sidwell.
Anonymous wrote:In the 80s and early 90s GDS was the school where liberal, Jewish intellectuals sent their kids. WASPY types never considered it because of that. Slowly I think folks started to realize that the kids were getting a great education there and what had been a mostly Jewish school (albeit very reform/progressive) started to change demographically. Also GDS had a reputation for being integrated early on and DC was a VERY segregated city so that probably held its reputation down in certain circles
Anonymous wrote:Maret was a last resort school, and Bullis wasn't even a laughable options.
I think, as the public schools continued to deteriorate in the 1990's (DCPS and DC in general hit a nadir during the crack epidemic and latter Barry years) and testing and overcrowding overtook the MoCo schools in the late 1990's and early 2000's, there is a huge influx of new demand that made "the top" schools even harder to get into and it trickled "down" to GDS and Maret and as those became more in demand, it tickled "down" to Burke, Field, St Andrews, WIS etc.
Anonymous wrote:50 years ago, China was a communist backwater. Today it is the second largest economy in the world, on the heels of the US. What is your point? That people don't work to change things?
Anonymous wrote:I grew up here in the 80s and it was considered a school where kids went that didn't "get in" - things have changed - what happened and when?
Anonymous wrote:When the Obamas visited it.