Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:18 kids from St Elizabeth’s in Rockville are in the incoming freshman class at OLGC. That’s a huge number from a parish that’s equally close to St. John’s and almost walking distance to Prep and Holy Cross.
They should not accept this many kids from one school. They need to diversify the freshman class to avoid cliquishness.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Has anyone ever been placed on a waiting list? How did you get off the waitlist this was my son first choice.
People will decline their spots and then they will fill those spots. A friend's son got off of the waiting list last year. We were also accepted and will be declining our spot.
Anonymous wrote:Has anyone ever been placed on a waiting list? How did you get off the waitlist this was my son first choice.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:18 kids from St Elizabeth’s in Rockville are in the incoming freshman class at OLGC. That’s a huge number from a parish that’s equally close to St. John’s and almost walking distance to Prep and Holy Cross.
They should not accept this many kids from one school. They need to diversify the freshman class to avoid cliquishness.
Anonymous wrote:18 kids from St Elizabeth’s in Rockville are in the incoming freshman class at OLGC. That’s a huge number from a parish that’s equally close to St. John’s and almost walking distance to Prep and Holy Cross.
Anonymous wrote:I worry about the MAGA thing and it sounds believable given where the school is located. I mean Olney isn't exactly the bastion of progressive politics, diversity and tolerance. Plus, I've heard that many of the parents there just dump their kids at GC to avoid the public schools, so there isn't an intentional building of a community with shared values, motivation and cohesion.
Anonymous wrote:I worry about the MAGA thing and it sounds believable given where the school is located. I mean Olney isn't exactly the bastion of progressive politics, diversity and tolerance. Plus, I've heard that many of the parents there just dump their kids at GC to avoid the public schools, so there isn't an intentional building of a community with shared values, motivation and cohesion.
Anonymous wrote:Tons of MAGA tells you the education level of parents
Many support kavanugh like he’s a god. The guy whose wife is afraid of him and oh dear had all his debts wiped clean.
Great Catholic education if that’s your priority fantastic school. Many people are super happy.
Graduates I know went off to University South Carolina, High Point University, York in PA, Villanova , and a host of small Catholic colleges.
Pretty sure you are confused. Your are describing GP. GC families I know are are Nasa engineers, Hopkins surgeons, well respected business owners, and artists of different genres. The academics are extremely rigorous, especially the AP/IB track.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Larger class size is one of the reasons GC is $30K (with lunch) and not $40K.
Smaller class size requires more teachers which increases costs.
If the difference between a Catholic high school and a public high school aren’t obvious, then no one on here is going to explain it to you. Catholics want their faith and community and family traditions reinforced. If those things aren’t important to you, Catholic schools aren’t for you.
The schools exist for these purposes and not to supply non-Catholics with more budget friendly alternatives to public schools. That may be why some struggle to understand.
Umm, I am Catholic and went to Catholic schools my whole life. But thanks for explaining. And there are actually plenty of smaller Catholic schools around. But if you want a diluted version that emulates a big public high school, that's your choice.