Anonymous wrote:Do most families have others writing "recommendations" for their applicant son?
Anonymous wrote:Maret's admit rate is incredibly low.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Please tell me what grade her son is entering next year. There are 4 going in to 4th and 7 in to 7th and one or two in to 9th (from St Pats). If it is a rising 4th grade parent then I know of whom you speak. If it is a rising 7th grade parent, I have no idea. Doesn't sound like anyone from that very nice class. Rising 9th I wouldn't know.
Anonymous wrote:This is what I hate about forums..the people from St. Pats who were accepted all now going to be under scrutiny possible by some jerk who wants to trash them on a forum. I know most of these families and they are nice..so I don't buy this. That being said..I love that people would want to hurt a child because there parents were idiots..if in fact this was true. What does this say about the complaining people?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yup, 30 to 40 % admit rate is quite distinct from 10 to 20 %.
But what school in the area has a 10-20% admit rate? I think you need to compare apples to apples. If you live in DC and you don't want to send your child to boarding, what schools completely overshadow St. Albans? Are there a lot of them?
I am a big STA fan, but have seen some numbers in past years and Sidwell is numerically fairly significantly more competitive. It is a bit of an apples to oranges comparison, however, because Sidwell gets huge application numbers for Pre-K and K, and there are more spots for those grade levels at Beauvoir, the STA feeder elementary school. By the high school application stage, Sidwell does still get proportionally more applicants for every available space, in large part because an additional 50% of the population is eligible to apply there as opposed to single sex St. Albans, but I cannot remember the numbers. My sense is that there is some self-selection into different pools -- some families don't want STA because of the Episcopalian religious component or single-sex, while others seek it out for those elements or for its more traditional structure in some ways (dress code, family style lunch), and that although Sidwell is more competitive on paper, the "qualifications" of the graduating classes at STA and Sidwell end up pretty much in the same place.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yup, 30 to 40 % admit rate is quite distinct from 10 to 20 %.
But what school in the area has a 10-20% admit rate? I think you need to compare apples to apples. If you live in DC and you don't want to send your child to boarding, what schools completely overshadow St. Albans? Are there a lot of them?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yup, 30 to 40 % admit rate is quite distinct from 10 to 20 %.
But what school in the area has a 10-20% admit rate? I think you need to compare apples to apples. If you live in DC and you don't want to send your child to boarding, what schools completely overshadow St. Albans? Are there a lot of them?
Anonymous wrote:Yup, 30 to 40 % admit rate is quite distinct from 10 to 20 %.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Instead of 4 out of 10 admission rate for boarders it is 3 out of 10 (30%) for day students.
Therefore, the overall admission rate for STA is 35%. Pretty good despite phenotype, pedigree, legacy and bank account.
http://www.greatschools.org/washington-dc/washington/206-St.-Albans-School/
I don't think your math quite works. There are only 30 spots for boarders out of 330 spots in the Upper School. A 40% admissions rate for 30 spots doesn't bump the overall admissions rate up to 35%.
30.8%.
You're welcome.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Instead of 4 out of 10 admission rate for boarders it is 3 out of 10 (30%) for day students.
Therefore, the overall admission rate for STA is 35%. Pretty good despite phenotype, pedigree, legacy and bank account.
http://www.greatschools.org/washington-dc/washington/206-St.-Albans-School/
I don't think your math quite works. There are only 30 spots for boarders out of 330 spots in the Upper School. A 40% admissions rate for 30 spots doesn't bump the overall admissions rate up to 35%.