Anonymous wrote:My neighbor's child goes to Sheridan and I've met a few dozen parents from there at various parties that my neighbor throws.
Everyone is nice and down-to-earth. Lots of people stretching to make the tuition work and would like to use public but can't for a variety of reasons (their local public is lousy, their child needs a smaller school setting, etc). A lot of parents are pretty quirky, some bordering on strange. Definitely not the DC VIPs or the country club set at all.
Anonymous wrote:I know you are in Upper NW, but we were in exactly the same position a handful of years ago and transferred our DC to CHDS (we do not live on the Hill so it did involve a commute). We visited three schools and upon visiting our DC said "I really want to go here". It was the perfect place for us -- warm, diverse, down to earth, enriching in every way: lots of writing in MS, nice kids, no focus on cars or clothes, kids are really friends in MS, etc. HS application process came around, and it was relatively stress free and worked out for everyone in the class. The other K-8 schools might be the same way, and are closer! Honestly, it changed things entirely for our child. Good luck OP!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's all relative but the most down-to-earth people I know at privates are at St. Patrick's.
Bwahaha!! You are off your rocker or high.
Anonymous wrote:OMG GDS
You can't obsess on Harvard, propose a massive development for Tenleytown and stress out about ranking among local independent schools and then claim you are "down-to-earth." You are the least dte school in the dmv.
"GDS has a down-to-earth atmosphere with a strong social justice tradition in the urban context."
Anonymous wrote:It's all relative but the most down-to-earth people I know at privates are at St. Patrick's.
Anonymous wrote:GDS has a down-to-earth atmosphere with a strong social justice tradition in the urban context.