Anonymous wrote:The following is a College Confidential post from August 2103, comparing Harvard-Westlake and Polytechnic, and apparently - from its style - written by a student:
Differences:
HW has much bigger size of class, HW 300, v Poly 100.
HW has two categories of students, the uber-rich, and the uber-smart. Poly is more uber-smart and pretty rich.
Matriculation numbers, if you are looking at HYPS is more impressive for Poly than HW, but part of it is because denominator for students per grade is lower at Poly while the numerator of uber-smart at HW is watered down by the uber-rich, average kids.
Average SAT score - higher for Poly over HW for same reason.
HW much better sports/athletics.
Poly more crunchy, bohemian. HW - new money, industry types. Poly - older money. HW - designer clothes. Poly - individualistic clothes.
HW with bigger student body, might provide a greater number of kids you have similar interests with. Poly - fewer kids to choose from.
HW - more kids, so more difficult to get spots in plays and sport. Poly - smaller so everyone who wants to can play whatever sport they want and most everyone can be in the musical or plays.
HW - kids bussed in from farther; their friends may live farther. Poly - mainly local kids and the far kids get driven in rather than bussed. Both places: fairly stressful with academics and work load.
Parents and kids from both schools are happy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anything that offers an experience comparable to the Cathedral schools? Or to Sidwell Friends School?
Polytechnic (in Pasadena) might be worth a look. Serious academics, very good college placements, the culture seems fairly middle-of-the-road (not super progressive, not super conservative). Due to location it probably doesn't attract as many Hollywood types as some of the others mentioned.
Anonymous wrote:Anything that offers an experience comparable to the Cathedral schools? Or to Sidwell Friends School?
Anonymous wrote:Anything that offers an experience comparable to the Cathedral schools? Or to Sidwell Friends School?
Anonymous wrote:Los Angeles is one of the few U.S. cities where the Catholic, parochial school system, as well as the Catholic high schools, remain strong, respected, and valued educational options. The non-secular and the secular co-exist quite nicely in the City (of The Virgin) of Angels.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:And about the friends of celebrities--they are going to be everywhere, it is LA!! That is like saying you are avoiding a DC school because of all the kids of Administration officials--you would rule out pretty much every school in NW, public and private.
You are right except for one thing, and that is when it comes to the celebrities themselves (their kids), as opposed to all the people in the entertainment industry, the celebrities themselves choose schools where there is security or gates to protect their kids from stalkers. So for example, in the Palisades is St. Matthew's Parish School. They get parents from in the entertainment industry but few parents of celebrities, because the campus, while gorgeous, does not have a guard and gates.
However, I agree with your larger point, PP. Lots of parents in the entertainment industry, so the entertainment culture pervades.
Anonymous wrote:And about the friends of celebrities--they are going to be everywhere, it is LA!! That is like saying you are avoiding a DC school because of all the kids of Administration officials--you would rule out pretty much every school in NW, public and private.
Anonymous wrote:The CEO and Founder of Snapchat in Venice/Santa Monica is a Crossroads alum.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I want to move to la. Will you hire me?
It's a good move. What is your field?[/qu
Anything to do with communications or editorial
Anonymous wrote:Does anyone know anything about the Archer School? And, the main differences, besides location, between Archer & Marlborough?