Anonymous wrote:OP here. I have never heard anything about religion being considered. I hope not anyway.
Anonymous wrote:It is true. I was surprised by that as well and so asked the school. Its a question of academic standards, period. Peter Barrett, head of St Patrick's, was a STA teacher. They know what he is doing, and doing well, at St Patricks. They want their kids educated at St Patrick's.
Anonymous wrote:It is indeed a mistake to assume that everyone wants to get their boys into STA or the other schools deemed "the biggies." We toured (and toured...and toured) pretty much all the private schools in the DC/MD/VA area. If anything, schools like STA and Sidwell completely turned us OFF. When my husband and I compared notes after, we both laughed as we agreed that some of the schools everyone was so ga-ga over... we HATED! (And we rarely agree on anything, which is why this was so surprising). There is so much that goes into a family's choice. And, boy - we would CERTAINLY not fit in well at a school where the parents are afraid to ask tough questions. It wouldn't even occur to me NOT to ask questions. There are schools that plummeted on our list because of the reaction to our questions or the simply BAD answers we got. We weren't asking anything obnoxious, but they weren't the softball fake questions one of the other posters referred to.
Bottom line, as others have pointed out: "Hard to get into" does not = the best. I loved the country club analogy a PP gave. It is not exactly parallel, but the message gets across splendidly.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Agreed! Sadly, my bet is it is these fake question posers are generally more successful than the quiet ones in gaining admission.
"Fake" and "posers"! Sums up my impression of the other parents at Beauvoir/NCS/STA.
Anonymous wrote:Agreed! Sadly, my bet is it is these fake question posers are generally more successful than the quiet ones in gaining admission.