Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am going to respectfully disagree with the poster who said:
They are, in order of academioc rigor: NCS, Holton, SR, Madeira.
Madeira's academics are rigorous and challenging. If it is number of AP classes you want then perhaps NCS is where you want to go. If you want your daughter to be achieve rigor while having a healthy high school experience I would consider Madeira. It is wise to visit all the schools in the area, speak with the students. As current students what their experience is like? When do they go to sleep at night? What do they typically do on weekends? Do they have downtime? My DD is at Madeira and will graduate with eight AP classes under her belt. That said, she gets sleep, fun with friends and time for herself.
AP classes are for public schools. The best privates are steadily doing away with them as their own curriculum based honors classes are better and more rigorous. NCS is part of that trend. And the top colleges are ceasing to accept AP credit. AP just means your kid followed a book - a very prescribed curriculum wit one forcus - scoring well on the AP exam. AP classes are not a sign of a top high school or top student.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am going to respectfully disagree with the poster who said:
They are, in order of academioc rigor: NCS, Holton, SR, Madeira.
Madeira's academics are rigorous and challenging. If it is number of AP classes you want then perhaps NCS is where you want to go. If you want your daughter to be achieve rigor while having a healthy high school experience I would consider Madeira. It is wise to visit all the schools in the area, speak with the students. As current students what their experience is like? When do they go to sleep at night? What do they typically do on weekends? Do they have downtime? My DD is at Madeira and will graduate with eight AP classes under her belt. That said, she gets sleep, fun with friends and time for herself.
AP classes are for public schools. The best privates are steadily doing away with them as their own curriculum based honors classes are better and more rigorous. NCS is part of that trend. And the top colleges are ceasing to accept AP credit. AP just means your kid followed a book - a very prescribed curriculum wit one forcus - scoring well on the AP exam. AP classes are not a sign of a top high school or top student.
Anonymous wrote:I am going to respectfully disagree with the poster who said:
They are, in order of academioc rigor: NCS, Holton, SR, Madeira.
Madeira's academics are rigorous and challenging. If it is number of AP classes you want then perhaps NCS is where you want to go. If you want your daughter to be achieve rigor while having a healthy high school experience I would consider Madeira. It is wise to visit all the schools in the area, speak with the students. As current students what their experience is like? When do they go to sleep at night? What do they typically do on weekends? Do they have downtime? My DD is at Madeira and will graduate with eight AP classes under her belt. That said, she gets sleep, fun with friends and time for herself.
Anonymous wrote:People who send their kids there love it, but it's not a complete experience. Athletics there are a complete joke.
Anonymous wrote:How is the academic of Madeira compare to Holton, NCS or Stone Ridge? DD is very much into science and wants to be an astrophysicist.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am going to speak out on behalf of single sex education programs in High School. When you combine strong female mentors and positive role models, reduced sex stereotyping in curriculum and classroom, and abundant learning opportunities, a national study showed that single-sex schools for females provide greater opportunity for educational attainment as measured by standardized cognitive tests, curriculum and course placement, leadership behavior, number of years of formal education, and occupational achievement. Regarding the prior author who stated that Madeira is geographically isolated...not sure where you think Madeira is but it is down the road from Langley, Potomac School, Oakcrest, McLean High School, Marshall etc... it is 15 minutes to georgetown and 15 minutes to Bethesda.
No it isn't.
Anonymous wrote:Dear 14:47 - nice try, but bringing up things that happened in 1973 and 1980? Seriously? Want to discuss any of the many current scandals at DC schools? I would guess that you also assume those of us who chose boarding schools for our sons and daughters are taking the easy way and neglecting our responsibilities. Guess what - you're wrong. It was the right school for us. Maybe not for everyone, but it was for us. I don't trash your choice, whatever it may be, so please stop trashing ours. And FYI, my daughter loved it, made lifelong friends, and is graduating from her first choice university this May. Most importantly, she is a welcoming friend to all she meets, speaks her truth in true Madeira style and would never resort to petty barbs on an anonymous forum to trash a school.
Anonymous wrote:I prefer my daughter's school to be without murdering headmistresses, campus abductions and rapes, notorious hazing rituals. Acid in the face disfigurements are also something we generally do not look for in a school.