Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:To OP, there isn't a private high school that isn't a pressure cooker to some degree. Similarly, for the kids on the college track, there isn't a public school that isn't, either.
This isn't true. Maret has quite the reputation. My friend is pulling her son out for high school. He's been there since K. She doesn't like what they do to boys. He's attending another private next year.
Is he in 8th grade now?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:To OP, there isn't a private high school that isn't a pressure cooker to some degree. Similarly, for the kids on the college track, there isn't a public school that isn't, either.
This isn't true. Maret has quite the reputation. My friend is pulling her son out for high school. He's been there since K. She doesn't like what they do to boys. He's attending another private next year.
What exactly do you mean by this? Was your child asked to leave because of unacceptable actions...ones that you feel are about being "PC", but others would consider good citizenship?
Anonymous wrote:My son actually left the school last year - it was too PC for us.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:To OP, there isn't a private high school that isn't a pressure cooker to some degree. Similarly, for the kids on the college track, there isn't a public school that isn't, either.
This isn't true. Maret has quite the reputation. My friend is pulling her son out for high school. He's been there since K. She doesn't like what they do to boys. He's attending another private next year.
Anonymous wrote:Maret: you won't pressure cook but you'll definitely get baked.
Anonymous wrote:Voice of reason here - it depends on your kid. My middle school boy absolutely does not spend hours of time doing homework and neither did his now hs brother. Maybe some kids do, but not mine. Both are happy and stimulated and the curriculum is developmentally appropriate. It's a rigorous school but not suffocating and the college placements are great.
Anonymous wrote:To OP, there isn't a private high school that isn't a pressure cooker to some degree. Similarly, for the kids on the college track, there isn't a public school that isn't, either.
Anonymous wrote:I don't know how it is "considered" by other people, and exactly what other people mean by "pressure cooker." But my child is in high school at Maret and it does not seem overly pressured to me. My child does work relatively hard, but never stays up late into the evening working. I get a sense that there is some competition among the high-academic kids, but all very friendly. Some kids' greatest strengths are in non-academic aspects of school life, and that seems to be fine. (Then again, my general sense is that most kids who feel "pressure cooked" in high school are getting most pressure from their parents.)