Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What’s WIS admittance rate for students without any disability? What about students with learning differences? By school? Serious question.
I don’t think they support learning differences much. The IB program is known to be rigorous. But I can’t speak for what it’s REALLY like at WIS. Not sure what’s up with this school.
At every school we visited, the shadows my son had all told some cautionary tale about WIS. DMV privâtes are small and everyone seems to know each other, but WIS definitely has a reputation among the kids as the school you don’t want to go to.
My son also said kids were on their phones during 9th grade math.. likely because the teacher’s accent was so thick no one could understand her. He said he couldn’t follow her at all.
The phone policy thing turned me off big time. The slacker vibes turned off my kid. That and the fact that his shadow told him there are better schools for him to attend 😳 Loved the admissions team though. Georgia is a gem and will not mince words helping you decide if it’s the right place for your kid.
Anonymous wrote:Current WIS parent here - would agree with above post - wish my student had been warned on their shadow day. Minimal school spirit or sense of community, maybe there is more if you are an international family and/or on the soccer or tennis teams which seem to get a lot of attention and are prioritized by the school - we are neither - this is just our experience.
Anonymous wrote:What’s WIS admittance rate for students without any disability? What about students with learning differences? By school? Serious question.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:STAY AWAY FROM WIS. ONLY REGRETS
Elaborate?
Anonymous wrote:But, from … WIS? 😂
Anonymous wrote:To clarify, one of the criteria is non-selectiveness. I’ve never met anyone who said they applied and didn’t get in but it might be that people who didn’t get it don’t want to talk about it.
Anonymous wrote:WIS is not an American school. It does not have American school spirit. This is not a bad thing or a good thing. It is a matter of taste.
There are people at WIS, however, who chose WIS because it is not an American school. This means either that they dislike certain elements of American private school culture or didn’t want it or don’t want it or look down on it.