Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Seeking some input. We have an athletic child who is pretty average in school. He’s pretty sensitive, not a good test taker with a very mild LD, no behavioral issues and has average social skills. Due to covid, we couldn’t tour classes in person last year and only got in to one private school. He loves the teachers at his new school and the activities and campus but isn’t making many friends and it’s bothering him. He wants us to save our money and send him to public school with his friends but the public school is not the best and wouldn’t support him academically. Do we start our search for a new private school again for next year?
How is he doing academically?
Our DS is the same. It’s hard to know because it was so competitive the last few years, it isn’t like folks had many options to choose from.
PP here. Our DS is all As. Enjoying academics but socially it’s a bust.
Op here. He’s doing well academically-As and high Bs and is in middle school. I hate to go through the application process again but I think we don’t have another choice as he says he isn’t happy.
MS is tough for friend making. I think you're jumping ship too quickly, give him time to find his people. It can take longer and longer the older kids get, very different from Elementary school. And if you move now, he'll be starting over again and possibly in a school that isnt as great of a fit in other areas.
What if he WANTS to change privates?
What would make another private a fit? Seems he’s in the right place academically so it’s hard to believe another private would check more boxes there. Since the issue is social, what makes him sure the other school is a better fit? I will assume that this school looked like a fit to him last year too?
Is next year an entry point at the other private? If it’s not, or if you just don’t get in, what next? I assume there’s a reason you switched from public in the first place.
Anonymous wrote:We're facing a similar issue, OP. We're at a SN school and kid loves it academically, and is doing well. Improving where she needs to. But the girl group is sooo small and so much drama. Mostly caused by one kid who likes to agitate, manipulate and pit kids against each other. It's caused issues. If DD can stay away from her, it's OK, but some days, it's not possible. The kids pair up and she ends up with troublemaker and when she gets home, it's tears and headaches and not wanting to go back.
She stays in touch with some of her public school friends and we make sure to do playdates with them more, simply because she'll be back in public with them one day. They're "easier," if that makes sense.
We're not ready to pull her out of private; she really needs the help. But dang, this social stuff is not something we thought would be such a big issue. It def caught us by surprise.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Seeking some input. We have an athletic child who is pretty average in school. He’s pretty sensitive, not a good test taker with a very mild LD, no behavioral issues and has average social skills. Due to covid, we couldn’t tour classes in person last year and only got in to one private school. He loves the teachers at his new school and the activities and campus but isn’t making many friends and it’s bothering him. He wants us to save our money and send him to public school with his friends but the public school is not the best and wouldn’t support him academically. Do we start our search for a new private school again for next year?
How is he doing academically?
Our DS is the same. It’s hard to know because it was so competitive the last few years, it isn’t like folks had many options to choose from.
PP here. Our DS is all As. Enjoying academics but socially it’s a bust.
Op here. He’s doing well academically-As and high Bs and is in middle school. I hate to go through the application process again but I think we don’t have another choice as he says he isn’t happy.
MS is tough for friend making. I think you're jumping ship too quickly, give him time to find his people. It can take longer and longer the older kids get, very different from Elementary school. And if you move now, he'll be starting over again and possibly in a school that isnt as great of a fit in other areas.
What if he WANTS to change privates?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Seeking some input. We have an athletic child who is pretty average in school. He’s pretty sensitive, not a good test taker with a very mild LD, no behavioral issues and has average social skills. Due to covid, we couldn’t tour classes in person last year and only got in to one private school. He loves the teachers at his new school and the activities and campus but isn’t making many friends and it’s bothering him. He wants us to save our money and send him to public school with his friends but the public school is not the best and wouldn’t support him academically. Do we start our search for a new private school again for next year?
How is he doing academically?
Our DS is the same. It’s hard to know because it was so competitive the last few years, it isn’t like folks had many options to choose from.
PP here. Our DS is all As. Enjoying academics but socially it’s a bust.
Op here. He’s doing well academically-As and high Bs and is in middle school. I hate to go through the application process again but I think we don’t have another choice as he says he isn’t happy.
MS is tough for friend making. I think you're jumping ship too quickly, give him time to find his people. It can take longer and longer the older kids get, very different from Elementary school. And if you move now, he'll be starting over again and possibly in a school that isnt as great of a fit in other areas.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Seeking some input. We have an athletic child who is pretty average in school. He’s pretty sensitive, not a good test taker with a very mild LD, no behavioral issues and has average social skills. Due to covid, we couldn’t tour classes in person last year and only got in to one private school. He loves the teachers at his new school and the activities and campus but isn’t making many friends and it’s bothering him. He wants us to save our money and send him to public school with his friends but the public school is not the best and wouldn’t support him academically. Do we start our search for a new private school again for next year?
How is he doing academically?
Our DS is the same. It’s hard to know because it was so competitive the last few years, it isn’t like folks had many options to choose from.
PP here. Our DS is all As. Enjoying academics but socially it’s a bust.
Op here. He’s doing well academically-As and high Bs and is in middle school. I hate to go through the application process again but I think we don’t have another choice as he says he isn’t happy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would give it until late February but make sure you have a backup option. I would never let my child go to a DCPS middle school if that’s even where friends are and being considered.
Hey now. DCPS middle schools (Hardy/Deal) are actually quite good, even this year.
I've had multiple kids go from Deal to Big3 schools for 9th (including this year) and they've done really well.
Lolololololol![]()
Laugh all you want but my Deal kid is now at a "Big3", getting straight A's (which is a rarity at this school).![]()
Because he has involved parents. Not because of Deal.
Anonymous wrote:OP, if you have reached the point of posting here, then I suspect it is time. We moved after 9th grade from one well known private on this board to another and it saved the high school experience for DC. And it is just word of mouth, of course, but the people we know who switched kids out are uniformly happy they did so.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would give it until late February but make sure you have a backup option. I would never let my child go to a DCPS middle school if that’s even where friends are and being considered.
Hey now. DCPS middle schools (Hardy/Deal) are actually quite good, even this year.
I've had multiple kids go from Deal to Big3 schools for 9th (including this year) and they've done really well.
Lolololololol![]()
Laugh all you want but my Deal kid is now at a "Big3", getting straight A's (which is a rarity at this school).![]()