Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am curious why then college acceptance rates do not bare this out. The school appears to be academically rigorous, well run and is churning out nice boys with high SAT scores.
SAAS annual reports are posted publicly and include matriculation lists (see, e.g., page 37 here: https://resources.finalsite.net/images/v1600196924/stanselms/qvg5r3t8chu6ggvm0hfk/AR1920.pdf )
Last year's class of 37 included matriculations to Columbia, Penn, Duke, Chicago, Georgetown (2), Rice, Vandy, UVA, W&M (2), Notre Dame (2), Haverford, Boston College (3), Tulane, and Lehigh. That's over half the class (and there are plenty of other fine schools on the rest of the list). Have a look. I don't know where this "unimpressive placements" nonsense comes from.
Anonymous wrote:I am curious why then college acceptance rates do not bare this out. The school appears to be academically rigorous, well run and is churning out nice boys with high SAT scores.
Anonymous wrote:Except for Univ of Chicago these are not impressive college acceptances. With 1400 SAT scores and AP classes I would expect at least some soft Ivies ( Brown, Williams, UCLA, Dartmouth). I am concerned with the schools outplacement.
Anonymous wrote:NP. I’m interested in the school for the next application cycle, so I’ve been doing some research. Based on what I have read so far, the school is challenging and the average SAT score is impressive. But the school’s college placements don’t seem particularly strong. Before anyone starts to launch grenades, I am not obsessed with college placements and am not a parent who believes private school education is a means to an Ivy or some such. I am, however, genuinely curious - for such academically bright group of boys, why are the college matriculations not as strong as one might expect? And yes, I recognize that top universities are extremely competitive, especially around here, but is that the full story?
Anonymous wrote:NP. I’m interested in the school for the next application cycle, so I’ve been doing some research. Based on what I have read so far, the school is challenging and the average SAT score is impressive. But the school’s college placements don’t seem particularly strong. Before anyone starts to launch grenades, I am not obsessed with college placements and am not a parent who believes private school education is a means to an Ivy or some such. I am, however, genuinely curious - for such academically bright group of boys, why are the college matriculations not as strong as one might expect? And yes, I recognize that top universities are extremely competitive, especially around here, but is that the full story?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Honestly do you think a school will be able to tell you they will not be able to support your kid when they know they can easily get 30k a year from you in this era of diversity and inclusion? All private schools, whether parochial or not are run like businesses these days... sorry to say.
This is absolutely not true of the Abbey. They will, and have, turned down applicants who they did not believe could handle the work and left seats vacant. If you have been accepted, they believe your son can succeed.
Not true at all!!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Honestly do you think a school will be able to tell you they will not be able to support your kid when they know they can easily get 30k a year from you in this era of diversity and inclusion? All private schools, whether parochial or not are run like businesses these days... sorry to say.
This is absolutely not true of the Abbey. They will, and have, turned down applicants who they did not believe could handle the work and left seats vacant. If you have been accepted, they believe your son can succeed.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Read on another thread that this school is for gifted boys. Is this correct?
"Gifted" is a loaded term. SAAS administers admissions tests (the OLSAT and SCAT) that are quite different from the SSAT/HSPT that most private schools use in that they are more abstract and harder to prepare for. I don't konw what score they look for, but I think it is more about whether they think your DS is a good fit and can handle the rigor, with or without the gifted label. I think there is general consensus that the academics at SAAS are more rigorous than the other all-boys Catholic schools (e.g., Prep, Gonzaga and Heights) in that all classes are at least honors level and many are AP. It's also much smaller (about 40 per graduating class) so you probably get more homogeneity in terms of academic abilities ranges. That said, by all accounts it not a pressure-cooker, cutthroat atmosphere, and the boys there seem to be very bright and welcoming, if somewhat more inclined to march to the beat of their own drum.
Anonymous wrote:Honestly do you think a school will be able to tell you they will not be able to support your kid when they know they can easily get 30k a year from you in this era of diversity and inclusion? All private schools, whether parochial or not are run like businesses these days... sorry to say.
Anonymous wrote:Unless your child has already been in a competitive middle school, I would be reluctant to send a child with executive function weakness to a tougher high school like SAAS. The workload at SAAS is challenging with a lot of memorization and short answer work every day. If he’s a better project kid, then look for that type of high school.