Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:http://www.wusa9.com/video/1913447070001/1/Bullis-Cornerback-JD-Dyer-Draws-Interest-From-Ivy-Leagues
Here's another star Bullis football player, but this one started in 8th grade and is being recruited by Harvard. The top running back and the quarterback have also been there since Middle School, and last year's QB started in 3rd grade. Maybe you should ask these parents directly if they are upset about one senior transfer.
Then it's too bad Bullis wasn't willing to compete with its "home grown" players and had to rent, I mean, recruit, senior year transfers from public schools.
What part of "one senior transfer" are you misunderstanding? There is one new senior on the football team. And isn't it great that he says "Bullis is the best thing to happen to him?" Come on out and cheer for the team this Saturday against Landon. The games are lots of fun and the fans are terrific. Or, perhaps you'd rather just sit at your computer and dump negative comments on this board.
Haha, funny reading this when the kid who said "Bullis is the best thing to happen to him" transferred back to his public high school after football season ended.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DS just finished the application process at a number of schools for admission this fall. Will not be going to Bullis -- sadly we didn't get in! But I was very impressed with the school. Maybe we'll try again next year.
And by the way, all those athletes? They really do have to hold their own academically and they contribute to the overall esprit of the school, which turns out en force at the football games, etc. I thought it was a great school that really serves its market niche student very, very well.
If they didn't import athletes en masse (and, with all due respect, you don't know if they have to hold their own academically), there might have been room for your child . . .
With all due respect, you don't know if they don't. Most do.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Another kid just asked this week to leave his Bethesda-area private boys school due to academic and behavioral issues...where is he going? Bullis. How does this happen when it's only October?
Have you asked yourself why that kid was not thriving in the other private school? If Bullis turns this kid around, that's impressive. I've seen it happen at my son's private. Kid who was considered a total 'loser' at his public or other private comes to my son's private, spends a month or so being like he was before the magic happens.
Consider the following:
My friend in CA teaches public. She got a kid in 6th grade who had literally been considered a lost cause by the school. The teacher who promoted him into her class literally said "good luck". To my friend, this means "I'm going to prove your *ss WRONG!". And that she did. Turns out the kid had a processing disorder previously unidentified. She spend the first two weeks watching him, then called me and said "I need an iPad for this kid - the school won't provide it". I sent her one for him. Within the month, he went from Fs to As. Was finishing all his homework. The more he succeeded, the harder he worked. She also, in observing him, asked his parents to have him evaluated as she saw a bit of a tic. Sure enough, he had mild tourettes as well. He walked into her class failing, walked out an A student.
This is part of the child's essay he wrote about her:
"Bae read to the audience his admiration for his teacher, Mrs. Siegel. Bae says Siegel helped him with his homework problem.
"Mrs. Siegel uncovered abilities in me that I didn't even know I had," Bae told the audience. "At first everyone could depend on me to be the only did who didn't have his homework. I was named the most frequent user of detention in my school. Ever since I was in third grade I had no confidence in my ability. My mom and I even cried because she didn't know how to help me and I thought I was a failure. Then I met Mrs. Siegel, who trusted and encouraged me even though I couldn't. She fixed the leak that was growing bigger in my life and patched up the holes in the screen."
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DS just finished the application process at a number of schools for admission this fall. Will not be going to Bullis -- sadly we didn't get in! But I was very impressed with the school. Maybe we'll try again next year.
And by the way, all those athletes? They really do have to hold their own academically and they contribute to the overall esprit of the school, which turns out en force at the football games, etc. I thought it was a great school that really serves its market niche student very, very well.
If they didn't import athletes en masse (and, with all due respect, you don't know if they have to hold their own academically), there might have been room for your child . . .
Anonymous wrote:DS just finished the application process at a number of schools for admission this fall. Will not be going to Bullis -- sadly we didn't get in! But I was very impressed with the school. Maybe we'll try again next year.
And by the way, all those athletes? They really do have to hold their own academically and they contribute to the overall esprit of the school, which turns out en force at the football games, etc. I thought it was a great school that really serves its market niche student very, very well.
Anonymous wrote:Another kid just asked this week to leave his Bethesda-area private boys school due to academic and behavioral issues...where is he going? Bullis. How does this happen when it's only October?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:http://www.wusa9.com/video/1913447070001/1/Bullis-Cornerback-JD-Dyer-Draws-Interest-From-Ivy-Leagues
Here's another star Bullis football player, but this one started in 8th grade and is being recruited by Harvard. The top running back and the quarterback have also been there since Middle School, and last year's QB started in 3rd grade. Maybe you should ask these parents directly if they are upset about one senior transfer.
Then it's too bad Bullis wasn't willing to compete with its "home grown" players and had to rent, I mean, recruit, senior year transfers from public schools.
What part of "one senior transfer" are you misunderstanding? There is one new senior on the football team. And isn't it great that he says "Bullis is the best thing to happen to him?" Come on out and cheer for the team this Saturday against Landon. The games are lots of fun and the fans are terrific. Or, perhaps you'd rather just sit at your computer and dump negative comments on this board.
Anonymous wrote:http://www.wusa9.com/video/1913447070001/1/Bullis-Cornerback-JD-Dyer-Draws-Interest-From-Ivy-Leagues
Here's another star Bullis football player, but this one started in 8th grade and is being recruited by Harvard. The top running back and the quarterback have also been there since Middle School, and last year's QB started in 3rd grade. Maybe you should ask these parents directly if they are upset about one senior transfer joining the team.
Anonymous wrote:We toured Bullis this week and were really impressed with the academic center, arts building, use of technology in classes, diversity of student body, and seemingly happy friendly students. Football didn't come up, but not sure it should. Of the nearly 700 kids at the school, only 30 or so play varsity football--not really that important to our family or our neighbors, who have two kids there.