Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Definitely have her do a shadow day. You could also tell her that if she absolutely hates it at the end of freshman year that you’ll let her go back to public school. I’m sure the prospect of starting a new school not knowing anyone is scary. Once she settles in and has friends it will be easier for her to truly evaluate the experience.
I was going to suggest a shadow day and also see if you can speak to current parents. That will help you decide if it is truly the best place for your DC.
Anonymous wrote:Op again- and honestly, I hate our public high school now that DS has had such a bad experience. DS has mental illness, exacerbated by environment and low quality friends at school, lack of help from school, 3rd counselor switch in 3 years. Teachers never ever email me when DS starts failing class, I meet with social worker and counselor and lots of lip service with no action.
I feel like I can't repeat that process again (and can't share full extent with DD without seemingly bashing DS )
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP no Catholic school is going to do well with that 504.
Please do not do this.
Let your child have a voice.
BS that a Catholic School is more academic than her public. We know why you want it op...
This - our local McLean parish school had no idea what to do with SN kids and 504s (which they will give a different title to). Huge waste of our time sending an ADHD there. Cruel environment
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP I was in your situation a few years back. My kid was in a large public middle with supposedly excellent academics but was getting As with no effort and his 504 was totally ignored. Given his good grades, we applied to private Catholic HS. He was totally opposed for the reasons your DD articulated. We essentially made him apply but told him that we would discuss options once the application process was over. He did a shadow day and I’m positive he went to the shadow day intending to hate it … but found he really liked it. He loved the small class sizes and classroom discussion and even the cafeteria. He liked the kids he met too.
When he got in, he did think about it, but finally decided to go. It has been a very good experience. He got the 504 support he needed (the school was much better for that than his public middle). Academically it was a shock and his first-year grades were not good. He went from “advanced” math to remedial math. I would say he was practically a year behind his Catholic school peers — they came in writing full essays, he had barely read a book at his school. It was a real struggle. But he is now getting As.
The one thing I will say is that we are in the college process now and his grades are markedly lower than some of his middle school peers who went to the local public. It may impact his college choices. At his school, the highest GPA any student can ever get is 4.2 because they don’t weight classes like the public school. On the other hand, he had had the benefit of a very rigorous education and is heading off the college very well prepared. And, hopefully the colleges understand the grading rigor. Since he wants to go to grad school, it may not be the worst thing to go to an undergraduate school that he will shine at. But he also just told me that he thinks his high school decision changed the course of his life. Some of his friends from middle school with similar profiles (boys who flew under the radar) aren’t even planning to go to college and he sees that.
Good luck!
Same experience here.
Anonymous wrote:Definitely have her do a shadow day. You could also tell her that if she absolutely hates it at the end of freshman year that you’ll let her go back to public school. I’m sure the prospect of starting a new school not knowing anyone is scary. Once she settles in and has friends it will be easier for her to truly evaluate the experience.
Anonymous wrote:My DH and I have decided the high performing Catholic high school will be the best school for our DD. (DH and I went to Catholic schools and really like the model of rules, high expectations, etc)
We have an older DS who is a Senior at the local "good" public high school, but we have been very disappointed with it. Too huge, kid is quiet so gets totally overlooked, 504 plan for ADHD is basically ignored, little homework or way too much with no guidance. I feel like it's not college prer, but rather "get the kid through and out" We want much better for ou
So, we've told out 8th grader that she will be going to St. X school, but she is totally against it. She wants the "easy" path of her older brother. She's afraid of having 2-3 hours of homework per night. She's says she'll have no friends (she's shy and only has 2 now), doesn't want to travel farther for it, etc.
I know St. X is the best place for her. Can I make her go, or is she destined for failure if her heart isn't in it?
Anonymous wrote:My family forced boy to go to a Catholic school that we told him was a great fit. He didn’t believe it. After a year there was promised transfer anywhere he could get into.
He went and later agreed that this had been a great school for him. Never wanted to transfer out. At 13 some kids just aren’t ready to make good decisions.
Anonymous wrote:If she doesn’t understand or appreciate the privilege and sacrifice, then no
Anonymous wrote:Give her more input to the process
Anonymous wrote:OP no Catholic school is going to do well with that 504.
Please do not do this.
Let your child have a voice.
BS that a Catholic School is more academic than her public. We know why you want it op...