Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s hard to explain to those who haven’t been at a K-8, how fundamentally different they are institutionally from a K-12. K-12s are going to be measured and judged principally by how good the high school is. So I t’s only natural that that is where the most institutional energy and attention will be focused. And high schools take a lot of resources and administrative attention to run well: beyond the academics, you’re talking about college counseling and placement, performing arts programs, athletics programs, sophisticated STEM programs (and the facilities to go with it), the list goes on.
Administrators, heads of school, boards of trustees only have so much time and attention to allocate. Sure, K-12 schools have division heads (as do most K-8 schools), but then they are one of several competing constituencies vying for institutional attention and resources. At a K-8 by contrast, there’s much more institutional ability to focus on every grade and every division, and to know that the entire institution up through the HoS and Board is focused on the lower and middle school experience. That may not matter to everyone, but it does make a noticeable difference when you experience it.
Do you have any experience sending your children to a K-12?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We did the K-8 for our children and while we had a great experience the HS search was more involved than I ever anticipated and it overshadowed the whole K-8 experience. I don’t regret having chosen the K-8. However, with the benefit of 20/20 hindsight I wouldn’t choose it again. Lesson learned for my next life.
You must have misspoken. There is no way that the brief process of applying to high school during Oct-Dec of the 8th grade year overshadows the experience of the entire preceding 8 years (kindergarten, first, second grade, etc).
— BTDT at Sheridan
Anonymous wrote:We did the K-8 for our children and while we had a great experience the HS search was more involved than I ever anticipated and it overshadowed the whole K-8 experience. I don’t regret having chosen the K-8. However, with the benefit of 20/20 hindsight I wouldn’t choose it again. Lesson learned for my next life.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you can get into a K-12 where you can see your DC would be happy, enroll. You can always apply out if it turns out to be a poor fit. It's much harder to get into the competitive schools as the kids get older. Not only are you applying against your classmates, which is its own special form of stress, but also against top-performing kids from public schools. That being said, if you can't find a K-12 where you think DC would be happy, then I would opt for a K-8, K-3, or a school focused on younger children.
It’s very hard to see where your five year old would be happy at seventeen. Especially since upper schools can be Very different from lower schools, even at the same school.
Anonymous wrote:There has been some research that shows that K-8's are better for kids in the middle school years. I also think that going through the looking at schools, applying, interviewing, process and then having to make friends and find your place in a new community at that 8th/9th grade age (whether you are coming from a K-8, a public middle school or transferring from another K-12) makes the college application process and social transition to college less daunting.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s hard to explain to those who haven’t been at a K-8, how fundamentally different they are institutionally from a K-12. K-12s are going to be measured and judged principally by how good the high school is. So I t’s only natural that that is where the most institutional energy and attention will be focused. And high schools take a lot of resources and administrative attention to run well: beyond the academics, you’re talking about college counseling and placement, performing arts programs, athletics programs, sophisticated STEM programs (and the facilities to go with it), the list goes on.
Administrators, heads of school, boards of trustees only have so much time and attention to allocate. Sure, K-12 schools have division heads (as do most K-8 schools), but then they are one of several competing constituencies vying for institutional attention and resources. At a K-8 by contrast, there’s much more institutional ability to focus on every grade and every division, and to know that the entire institution up through the HoS and Board is focused on the lower and middle school experience. That may not matter to everyone, but it does make a noticeable difference when you experience it.
Do you have any experience sending your children to a K-12?
Anonymous wrote:It’s hard to explain to those who haven’t been at a K-8, how fundamentally different they are institutionally from a K-12. K-12s are going to be measured and judged principally by how good the high school is. So I t’s only natural that that is where the most institutional energy and attention will be focused. And high schools take a lot of resources and administrative attention to run well: beyond the academics, you’re talking about college counseling and placement, performing arts programs, athletics programs, sophisticated STEM programs (and the facilities to go with it), the list goes on.
Administrators, heads of school, boards of trustees only have so much time and attention to allocate. Sure, K-12 schools have division heads (as do most K-8 schools), but then they are one of several competing constituencies vying for institutional attention and resources. At a K-8 by contrast, there’s much more institutional ability to focus on every grade and every division, and to know that the entire institution up through the HoS and Board is focused on the lower and middle school experience. That may not matter to everyone, but it does make a noticeable difference when you experience it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you can get into a K-12 where you can see your DC would be happy, enroll. You can always apply out if it turns out to be a poor fit. It's much harder to get into the competitive schools as the kids get older. Not only are you applying against your classmates, which is its own special form of stress, but also against top-performing kids from public schools. That being said, if you can't find a K-12 where you think DC would be happy, then I would opt for a K-8, K-3, or a school focused on younger children.
It’s very hard to see where your five year old would be happy at seventeen. Especially since upper schools can be Very different from lower schools, even at the same school.
Anonymous wrote:There has been some research that shows that K-8's are better for kids in the middle school years. I also think that going through the looking at schools, applying, interviewing, process and then having to make friends and find your place in a new community at that 8th/9th grade age (whether you are coming from a K-8, a public middle school or transferring from another K-12) makes the college application process and social transition to college less daunting.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you can get into a K-12 where you can see your DC would be happy, enroll. You can always apply out if it turns out to be a poor fit. It's much harder to get into the competitive schools as the kids get older. Not only are you applying against your classmates, which is its own special form of stress, but also against top-performing kids from public schools. That being said, if you can't find a K-12 where you think DC would be happy, then I would opt for a K-8, K-3, or a school focused on younger children.
It’s very hard to see where your five year old would be happy at seventeen. Especially since upper schools can be Very different from lower schools, even at the same school.