Anonymous wrote:People like winners. It's that simple.
Anonymous wrote:People like winners. It's that simple.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I had an interesting conversation with Dr. Boarman a couple of years ago at a sporting event early in his tenure (he was very friendly and engaging, by the way). He said that people like awards and prizes and winning, so he would build up high profile sports, in large part by using his ontacts to get many athletes from PG County. He said Bullis would also use money as, effectively, merit scholarships for academics and they'd get a bunch of National Merit Semi-Finalists at the top end who would be the equivalent of the star athletes and give Bullis more publicity in the academic realm.
Gad -- that sounds completely idiotic. Parents of kids with that kind of academic potential can get financial aid at other schools with greater resources. Regardless of financial aid, parents of those kids are looking for a robust curriculum, strong faculty and a critical mass of other kids with the same academic fire-power.
Baby boomers want "robust curriculum". Gen Xers want balance.
Anonymous wrote:People like winners. It's that simple.
Anonymous wrote:People like winners. It's that simple.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I had an interesting conversation with Dr. Boarman a couple of years ago at a sporting event early in his tenure (he was very friendly and engaging, by the way). He said that people like awards and prizes and winning, so he would build up high profile sports, in large part by using his ontacts to get many athletes from PG County. He said Bullis would also use money as, effectively, merit scholarships for academics and they'd get a bunch of National Merit Semi-Finalists at the top end who would be the equivalent of the star athletes and give Bullis more publicity in the academic realm.
Gad -- that sounds completely idiotic. Parents of kids with that kind of academic potential can get financial aid at other schools with greater resources. Regardless of financial aid, parents of those kids are looking for a robust curriculum, strong faculty and a critical mass of other kids with the same academic fire-power.
Anonymous wrote:I had an interesting conversation with Dr. Boarman a couple of years ago at a sporting event early in his tenure (he was very friendly and engaging, by the way). He said that people like awards and prizes and winning, so he would build up high profile sports, in large part by using his ontacts to get many athletes from PG County. He said Bullis would also use money as, effectively, merit scholarships for academics and they'd get a bunch of National Merit Semi-Finalists at the top end who would be the equivalent of the star athletes and give Bullis more publicity in the academic realm.
Anonymous wrote:I had an interesting conversation with Dr. Boarman a couple of years ago at a sporting event early in his tenure (he was very friendly and engaging, by the way). He said that people like awards and prizes and winning, so he would build up high profile sports, in large part by using his ontacts to get many athletes from PG County. He said Bullis would also use money as, effectively, merit scholarships for academics and they'd get a bunch of National Merit Semi-Finalists at the top end who would be the equivalent of the star athletes and give Bullis more publicity in the academic realm.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's not clear that a higher profile does bring in more money (either in the form of tuition or giving), and, even if it does, the question is where those resources will be allocated. Boarman doesn't seem terribly interested in academics, so it's not clear that this aspect of the school will benefit. Right now Bullis has a solid cohort of students who are academic high-achievers -- not as large as Sidwell/STA/NCS/GDS -- but not incosiderable either (and remember that at those schools not every child is above average either). Whether that cohort expands, stays steady or declines in the Bullis of the future is not clear.
I think you're also the person who posted at 20:34. You're one of the sanest and most coherent posters on DCUM I've come across.
Boarman is trying to up the profile of the school and satisfy alums/donors with the sports stuff but if you look at his track record at Eleanor Roosevelt and the North Carolina School of Science and Mathematics you'll discover that he is interested in academics. Tom Farquhar, now at Sidwell, did great things for the Bullis humanities curriculum, teacher development and capital improvements. Boarman was hired to beef up science, technology and mathematics and improve the faltering sports program. Whether or not his sports tactic works or not and what effect it may have on the academic program overall does remain to be seen. He's a bit bombastic and uncouth - the antithesis of Tom Farquhar - but he may just drive the school forward. Time will tell.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's not clear that a higher profile does bring in more money (either in the form of tuition or giving), and, even if it does, the question is where those resources will be allocated. Boarman doesn't seem terribly interested in academics, so it's not clear that this aspect of the school will benefit. Right now Bullis has a solid cohort of students who are academic high-achievers -- not as large as Sidwell/STA/NCS/GDS -- but not incosiderable either (and remember that at those schools not every child is above average either). Whether that cohort expands, stays steady or declines in the Bullis of the future is not clear.
I think you're also the person who posted at 20:34. You're one of the sanest and most coherent posters on DCUM I've come across.
Boarman is trying to up the profile of the school and satisfy alums/donors with the sports stuff but if you look at his track record at Eleanor Roosevelt and the North Carolina School of Science and Mathematics you'll discover that he is interested in academics. Tom Farquhar, now at Sidwell, did great things for the Bullis humanities curriculum, teacher development and capital improvements. Boarman was hired to beef up science, technology and mathematics and improve the faltering sports program. Whether or not his sports tactic works or not and what effect it may have on the academic program overall does remain to be seen. He's a bit bombastic and uncouth - the antithesis of Tom Farquhar - but he may just drive the school forward. Time will tell.