Anonymous wrote:I'm really happy that you found a great school for your son! Honestly, there should be more similar schools across the country.
Thank you. On the off chance that this will help another family, here are the other schools similar to The Heights that I found:
Houston, TX
Western Academy (grades 3-8) https://www.westernacademy.net/
Located near Memorial Villages which are some of the nicest neighborhoods in Houston.
Millis, MA
Sparhawk Academy (grades 3-8) https://sparhawkacademy.org/
Pretty land. You can live in Wellesley and divide the commute if someone needed to work in Boston.
Chicago, IL
Northridge Preparatory School (grades 6-12) https://northridgeprep.org/
Just over the border of Chicago in Niles. Safe, but not very pretty. Nearby Park Ridge is nice. Well-developed HS program.
Anonymous wrote:I'm really happy that you found a great school for your son! Honestly, there should be more similar schools across the country.
Thank you. On the off chance that this will help another family, here are the other schools similar to The Heights that I found:
Houston, TX
Western Academy (grades 3-8) https://www.westernacademy.net/
Located near Memorial Villages which are some of the nicest neighborhoods in Houston.
Millis, MA
Sparhawk Academy (grades 3-8) https://sparhawkacademy.org/
Pretty land. You can live in Wellesley and divide the commute if someone needed to work in Boston.
Chicago, IL
Northridge Preparatory School (grades 6-12) https://northridgeprep.org/
Just over the border of Chicago in Niles. Safe, but not very pretty. Nearby Park Ridge is nice. Well-developed HS program.
I'm really happy that you found a great school for your son! Honestly, there should be more similar schools across the country.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There are no feeder schools to either.
The Heights is extremely competitive.
Attend the lectures, start going to open houses early, and start doing camps young to familiarize with school and faculty. It's heaven on earth for boys, I hope you can get in!
Let's not get carried away. The lower school is pretty close for most boys, but after that there are a number of things that they need to work on.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The Heights and Oakcrest are extraordinarily conservative. People call it “ultra conservative“. Just keep that in mind.
Conservative, not "ultra" -- its just that every other school promotes LGBTQ and non-family values. Standing for traditional marriage/society isn't "ultra"
Do they encourage students to marry young?
Anonymous wrote:There are no feeder schools to either.
The Heights is extremely competitive.
Attend the lectures, start going to open houses early, and start doing camps young to familiarize with school and faculty. It's heaven on earth for boys, I hope you can get in!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The Heights and Oakcrest are extraordinarily conservative. People call it “ultra conservative“. Just keep that in mind.
Conservative, not "ultra" -- its just that every other school promotes LGBTQ and non-family values. Standing for traditional marriage/society isn't "ultra"
Anonymous wrote:My son was not offered a place at The Heights. We had an opportunity to move to a different state with a similar school that made us feel welcome. My son is thriving.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The Heights and Oakcrest are extraordinarily conservative. People call it “ultra conservative“. Just keep that in mind.
Conservative, not "ultra" -- its just that every other school promotes LGBTQ and non-family values. Standing for traditional marriage/society isn't "ultra"
Anonymous wrote:The Heights and Oakcrest are extraordinarily conservative. People call it “ultra conservative“. Just keep that in mind.
Anonymous wrote:We applied multiple times to the Heights and got turned down... it's very annoying as 35 of the available 45 slots were reserved for alumni kids, siblings, and teachers kids. If you don't have an "in" - you're not going there. And my kids supposedly attend a "feeder" school.
I also know a wonderful boy who didn’t get into The Heights for 9th grade. He is academically gifted, kind, fit, the whole package! Plus, a great family. He wanted to go there so much! Basically, there were no spaces once all of the “hooked” kids were admitted.
There were other great boys who couldn’t get in at various grade levels.
Unless you have a special connection to the school it’s not happening!
The girls school should be fine, if your family is a match they will have a spot. Perhaps you can get your daughter into Oakcrest then use that as leverage to gain admission for your boys.