Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I have no doubt this is true. Lots of mediocre and good students apply to both GC and St John’s. There are far more mediocre and good students collectively than excellent/stellar students. The excellent//stellar students typically apply and aim to get into Visi/Stone Ridge/Prep/Gonzaga and use GC and St John’s as back ups so GC and St. John’s actually get MORE applications than the top schools because everyone applies there. The high number of applications and yield at St. John’s doesn’t mean that the school is highly competitive though. It’s like saying that because more people buy leggings from Walmart than Lululemon, that Walmart therefore must have the best leggings.
I don’t know why people post comments like this. I have DC at both SJC and one of the other schools. The smartest, most academic by far, attends SJC.
Some of ya’ll really hate SJC and GC and need to make yourself believe there are not bright students at these schools. Some kids don’t want attend Visi/Stone Ridge/NCS/Prep. Heck I’ve know kids to attend NCS lower school and go on to attend SJC for HS. Not because they couldn’t cut it at NCS for HS but because they wanted something different.
Something easier. 😉. There, I fixed that for you.
Anonymous wrote:In general the admissions rates are highest at the schools with a lot of ninth grade spots to fill. One of the reasons the fancy DC schools are tough admits is because they often only have 10-25 spots. The big Catholics are adding more than 10 times that amount or more.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Any big Catholic school or ones that are struggling with enrollment (Sandy Spring Friends, SAES)
St. Andrew's is struggling with enrollment?
This was my thought exactly… St. Andrew’s was rejecting straight A kids last year, so I doubt they are struggling with enrollment.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Any big Catholic school or ones that are struggling with enrollment (Sandy Spring Friends, SAES)
St. Andrew's is struggling with enrollment?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In general the admissions rates are highest at the schools with a lot of ninth grade spots to fill. One of the reasons the fancy DC schools are tough admits is because they often only have 10-25 spots. The big Catholics are adding more than 10 times that amount or more.
Don’t most of the fancy DC schools nearly double the class for 9th? I think it’s more like 50-60 spots to fill except for STA/NCS which are smaller schools.
Anonymous wrote:In general the admissions rates are highest at the schools with a lot of ninth grade spots to fill. One of the reasons the fancy DC schools are tough admits is because they often only have 10-25 spots. The big Catholics are adding more than 10 times that amount or more.
Anonymous wrote:Any big Catholic school or ones that are struggling with enrollment (Sandy Spring Friends, SAES)
Anonymous wrote:Admission rates wouldn’t be useful even if they were public. I would guess that the rates for 9th at the fancy schools aren’t as low as people would guess because they get fewer applications. For example, at our well known K-8 only a couple of kids applied to Sidwell. I bet their application volume for ninth is nowhere near as high as people would guess and its admissions rate is higher. But that doesn’t mean it’s easy to get into. Just the applicant pool is self selecting. For K and elementary it would be a different story.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I have no doubt this is true. Lots of mediocre and good students apply to both GC and St John’s. There are far more mediocre and good students collectively than excellent/stellar students. The excellent//stellar students typically apply and aim to get into Visi/Stone Ridge/Prep/Gonzaga and use GC and St John’s as back ups so GC and St. John’s actually get MORE applications than the top schools because everyone applies there. The high number of applications and yield at St. John’s doesn’t mean that the school is highly competitive though. It’s like saying that because more people buy leggings from Walmart than Lululemon, that Walmart therefore must have the best leggings.
I don’t know why people post comments like this. I have DC at both SJC and one of the other schools. The smartest, most academic by far, attends SJC.
Some of ya’ll really hate SJC and GC and need to make yourself believe there are not bright students at these schools. Some kids don’t want attend Visi/Stone Ridge/NCS/Prep. Heck I’ve know kids to attend NCS lower school and go on to attend SJC for HS. Not because they couldn’t cut it at NCS for HS but because they wanted something different.
Something easier. 😉. There, I fixed that for you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I have no doubt this is true. Lots of mediocre and good students apply to both GC and St John’s. There are far more mediocre and good students collectively than excellent/stellar students. The excellent//stellar students typically apply and aim to get into Visi/Stone Ridge/Prep/Gonzaga and use GC and St John’s as back ups so GC and St. John’s actually get MORE applications than the top schools because everyone applies there. The high number of applications and yield at St. John’s doesn’t mean that the school is highly competitive though. It’s like saying that because more people buy leggings from Walmart than Lululemon, that Walmart therefore must have the best leggings.
I don’t know why people post comments like this. I have DC at both SJC and one of the other schools. The smartest, most academic by far, attends SJC.
Some of ya’ll really hate SJC and GC and need to make yourself believe there are not bright students at these schools. Some kids don’t want attend Visi/Stone Ridge/NCS/Prep. Heck I’ve know kids to attend NCS lower school and go on to attend SJC for HS. Not because they couldn’t cut it at NCS for HS but because they wanted something different.
Anonymous wrote:
I have no doubt this is true. Lots of mediocre and good students apply to both GC and St John’s. There are far more mediocre and good students collectively than excellent/stellar students. The excellent//stellar students typically apply and aim to get into Visi/Stone Ridge/Prep/Gonzaga and use GC and St John’s as back ups so GC and St. John’s actually get MORE applications than the top schools because everyone applies there. The high number of applications and yield at St. John’s doesn’t mean that the school is highly competitive though. It’s like saying that because more people buy leggings from Walmart than Lululemon, that Walmart therefore must have the best leggings.
I don’t know why people post comments like this. I have DC at both SJC and one of the other schools. The smartest, most academic by far, attends SJC.