Anonymous wrote:The girls who seem to be happiest are those deeply committed to their sport or extracurricular activity and have grounded parents.
Anonymous wrote:I'm not the other person raising the sock puppetry idea but I had exactly the same reaction. Posts that just read the same, same style of writing, same tone, with what sounds like an exaggerated story. I have a DD at NCS and I agree that while we are happy with it, it isn't for everyone. but even the folks I know who aren't happy don't sound this hyperbolic. It just doesn't read real. Even the sitting alone in the lunchroom thing. Maybe, I'm sure its possible. But I've been in that lunch many times and I never saw anything like that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For us, there was little joy in any of the years. As a new freshman my DD would naively sit at any lunch table assuming the girls would be friendly-- and would be completely ignored.
PP, I feel really sad for your DD after reading this. My DD is an alum and hates NCS. I'm just relieved that she found her joy again in college. As a parent, I'm totally guilty of subjecting my daughter to a school that wasn't a good fit for her, we should have pulled her out at the end of 6th grade. I thought keeping her at NCS was the best option.
I am glad your DD is in a happier place now. All we can do for ours is look forward to her graduation. I really wish I had known. People did try to warn us when she was accepted, but I foolishly did not listen.
What was the warning? I have my own views, based on friends' direct experience. I'm trying to gently warn a friend whose daughter is sensitive but I don't want to upset her.
The warning was that the school was a pressure cooker and that there was a significant mean girl atmosphere. I wasn't
concerned about the academic challenge/intensity but I do wish I had fully grasped the extent of the negative social dynamic.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For us, there was little joy in any of the years. As a new freshman my DD would naively sit at any lunch table assuming the girls would be friendly-- and would be completely ignored.
PP, I feel really sad for your DD after reading this. My DD is an alum and hates NCS. I'm just relieved that she found her joy again in college. As a parent, I'm totally guilty of subjecting my daughter to a school that wasn't a good fit for her, we should have pulled her out at the end of 6th grade. I thought keeping her at NCS was the best option.
I am glad your DD is in a happier place now. All we can do for ours is look forward to her graduation. I really wish I had known. People did try to warn us when she was accepted, but I foolishly did not listen.
What was the warning? I have my own views, based on friends' direct experience. I'm trying to gently warn a friend whose daughter is sensitive but I don't want to upset her.
Anonymous wrote:For us, there was little joy in any of the years. As a new freshman my DD would naively sit at any lunch table assuming the girls would be friendly-- and would be completely ignored.
Anonymous wrote:I'm not the other person raising the sock puppetry idea but I had exactly the same reaction. Posts that just read the same, same style of writing, same tone, with what sounds like an exaggerated story. I have a DD at NCS and I agree that while we are happy with it, it isn't for everyone. but even the folks I know who aren't happy don't sound this hyperbolic. It just doesn't read real. Even the sitting alone in the lunchroom thing. Maybe, I'm sure its possible. But I've been in that lunch many times and I never saw anything like that.