Anonymous wrote:Take other's opinions with a grain of salt. One school can be perfect for one family and not for another. Just don't listen too closely to other people. Go to open houses. Talk to families currently at the school. Ask good questions. Meet the students - perhaps they even give tours during open houses. That's how you learn about a school. A lot of it is a gut feeling and you should ask yourself how you feel when you are at the school and how your child would feel.
Anonymous wrote: OP here. As I said in my original post, contrary impressions of these schools are more than welcome, and I'm glad your experience with Maddux was more positive. And also, my original post stated clearly that it reflected our subjective experience, not a definitive opinion on which schools are best for everybody.
Just in the sake of clarity, we actually did research all those factors you mentioned. It's one reason why it was so frustrating for us that Maddux was so unresponsive -- not once, but twice. We wouldn't have looked into them if we hadn't thought there was something there worth investigating.
When parents are putting themselves and their child through a school search, it can be very stressful. You are aware that your child is being judged in the process, and a good school should be sensitive to that and responsive to prospective parents who are putting their child out there. We experienced a range of professionalism in visiting 14 schools (and we called even more than that). Unfortunately Maddux handled our inquiries with the worst manners on both occasions. We were truly appreciative whenever other schools gave us a warmer reception.
I don't allege that Maddux hasn't been able to offer good things to the children who attend; but in our experience (and apparently the experience of at least two others on this thread) this is in spite of the unresponsiveness of the school administrators, not because of it. If Maddux is growing as fast as you say than they ought to be able to hire someone who makes sure that when parents are told that they will be contacted, that they actually will be, rather than being left hanging time and again.
And as others have pointed out, if you don't want to know of others' thoughts about schools, it might not make sense to read the DCUM message boards about schools. And if Maddux doesn't want parents to denigrate them, they can return prospective parents' calls.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Lay off, people. I think I know the OP and she truly is a happy parent at Barnesville. She is not part of a conspiracy in which Barnesville administration is posting on DCUM pretending to be a satisfied parent in hopes of increasing their enrollment.
Everything she has written is true. She just wants to help people be more knowledgeable about different schools that don't get as much mention on these boards.
No conspiracy - just a nice mom trying to be helpful. Really.
So what? If she doesn't like the negative comments, then she shouldn't have posted.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why is it helpful to read one person's subjective opinion of each of these schools? I would never make the decision on whether to visit a school based on this information.
Then why have a private schools forum at all where people can give their subjective opinions on any school? No one should be making a decision whether to visit a school based on what they read on any DCUM thread?
If you don't like reading people's opinions on schools, then don't read this forum and just form your own opinion by visiting the school. Some people do like to hear other's opinions.
When a poster asks for specific information about a particular school fine. The OP decided her to bless us with her wonderful opinions about all the schools she visited. Somehow she decided that we all wanted to know her thoughts.
In particular she decided that one school was unprofessional. Did she look at the backgrounds of administrators and teacher's? Teacher turnover? How is the curriculum developed? What is the turnover of families? No.
In particular, she denigrated Maddux, a school that has had considerable growth and popularity for families with kids with social and learning issue, The founder, Andrea Mullins, has grown the school from a preschool and pre k class to one that now goes through 2nd grade, all in 9 years. They receive far more applications then they have space available every year.
The teacher's background and dedication is second to none. OP decided because they did not call her back, the school was not recommended by her. Had she actually taken the time to research the program where the teacher's come from and their success rate with kids, she might have seen why the school is so good for so many.
Anonymous wrote:Lay off, people. I think I know the OP and she truly is a happy parent at Barnesville. She is not part of a conspiracy in which Barnesville administration is posting on DCUM pretending to be a satisfied parent in hopes of increasing their enrollment.
Everything she has written is true. She just wants to help people be more knowledgeable about different schools that don't get as much mention on these boards.
No conspiracy - just a nice mom trying to be helpful. Really.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why is it helpful to read one person's subjective opinion of each of these schools? I would never make the decision on whether to visit a school based on this information.
Then why have a private schools forum at all where people can give their subjective opinions on any school? No one should be making a decision whether to visit a school based on what they read on any DCUM thread?
If you don't like reading people's opinions on schools, then don't read this forum and just form your own opinion by visiting the school. Some people do like to hear other's opinions.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What are these teaching methods you mention? How do you know what methods would be best for your child? If you are not an educator, this entire thread is bogus.
I'm so sick of parents thinking they 'know education'. They don't and neither do you.
NP here - parents may not "know education" per se but I think they do know their own children. I think for the majority of children, they can thrive in a variety of educational environments - but for some kids, the educational environment can make a big difference. Granted, there are probably plenty of parents out there that erroneously believe their kid is "the one that is different"; that just makes it harder for the families that have a valid case. For the families I know that have a child where educational environment makes a big difference, it is not the parent being hyper sensitive - it is also the school and teachers giving them feedback, usually from early ages to help the family guide the child to the best match for success. Schools and classrooms can vary quite a bit on dimensions that don't make a difference to most families, but do make a difference to others.
OP here. I agree with the respondent above. There are two important sides to the coin here; what the educators have to offer, and the child to whom it is being offered. Professional educators have the most information about the first, and parents about the second.
Every child is different. For one child, McLean might be a fine choice and Norwood a problematic one. For another child the reverse might be true. There is no objective best/worst school -- it's an interaction between the child's needs/learning processes, and what the school offers.
In our case we have learned a lot about how our child learns, and the circumstances that enable her to thrive vs becoming frustrated. That experience has been borne of years of experience with schooling, extracurricular classes, social skills teaching sessions, testing, home instruction, and much else.
We have learned to be wary of any teacher/institution who approaches things from the perspective of, "This is what we do because it works best for everyone." In our case that often wasn't true. Fortunately we adapted, and found settings that worked, and now we have a high academic achiever in our household.
Again, I would reiterate that the title of this thread is "Subjective capsule reviews," and that the first post took pains to point out that the reviews referred to the specific match between child and school. If someone objects that some schools that were less attractive to us are objectively "better schools," then they are missing the point of the thread as well as the larger point that what's "best" is a function of several variables, including the child being placed as well as many others ranging from location to price. As the original post noted, Charles E. Smith might be a perfectly fine school, but the percentage of the day spent on Judaic studies made it a suboptimal choice for us. That's not a criticism of Charles E. Smith or of Judaic studies.
In our particular case, we had a strong academic performer needing a socially nurturing environment, so Barnesville rose to the top of our list, and St. Andrews was right behind it. Other parents' priorities may differ. Contrary experiences with the 14 schools reviewed are more than welcome.
Anonymous wrote:Why is it helpful to read one person's subjective opinion of each of these schools? I would never make the decision on whether to visit a school based on this information.
Anonymous wrote:Why is it helpful to read one person's subjective opinion of each of these schools? I would never make the decision on whether to visit a school based on this information.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why is it helpful to read one person's subjective opinion of each of these schools? I would never make the decision on whether to visit a school based on this information.
Then why have a private schools forum at all where people can give their subjective opinions on any school? No one should be making a decision whether to visit a school based on what they read on any DCUM thread?
If you don't like reading people's opinions on schools, then don't read this forum and just form your own opinion by visiting the school. Some people do like to hear other's opinions.
Anonymous wrote:Why is it helpful to read one person's subjective opinion of each of these schools? I would never make the decision on whether to visit a school based on this information.