Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The elite privates really shouldn’t have grades. To simply get admitted into an elite is an accomplishment — and once in, the rigor, depth and expectations are vastly superior to anything “taught” in a public, where kids are given all As for having a pulse. It’s just not fair.
It's not hard to be admitted to the "elite privates" -- mainly, you just have to be rich. And the schools are not terribly impressive. Look at where their graduates get accepted to college.
Huh?
https://www.andover.edu/files/CCOProfileBrochure2018-2019.pdf
https://www.exeter.edu/academics/college-counseling/beyond-exeter/college-matriculation
https://www.gprep.org/academics/college-counseling/class-of-2019-college-matriculation
I thought this was a forum about DC schools, and, last I checked, neither Andover nor Exeter are here. Are we comparing all schools everywhere now? As for the Georgetown Prep list, am I supposed to be impressed by this?
Certainly some parents in DC are considering boarding school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The elite privates really shouldn’t have grades. To simply get admitted into an elite is an accomplishment — and once in, the rigor, depth and expectations are vastly superior to anything “taught” in a public, where kids are given all As for having a pulse. It’s just not fair.
It's not hard to be admitted to the "elite privates" -- mainly, you just have to be rich. And the schools are not terribly impressive. Look at where their graduates get accepted to college.
Huh?
https://www.andover.edu/files/CCOProfileBrochure2018-2019.pdf
https://www.exeter.edu/academics/college-counseling/beyond-exeter/college-matriculation
https://www.gprep.org/academics/college-counseling/class-of-2019-college-matriculation
I thought this was a forum about DC schools, and, last I checked, neither Andover nor Exeter are here. Are we comparing all schools everywhere now? As for the Georgetown Prep list, am I supposed to be impressed by this?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The elite privates really shouldn’t have grades. To simply get admitted into an elite is an accomplishment — and once in, the rigor, depth and expectations are vastly superior to anything “taught” in a public, where kids are given all As for having a pulse. It’s just not fair.
It's not hard to be admitted to the "elite privates" -- mainly, you just have to be rich. And the schools are not terribly impressive. Look at where their graduates get accepted to college.
Yes. Parents look at college matriculation, which is very impressive at the schools we are discussing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The elite privates really shouldn’t have grades. To simply get admitted into an elite is an accomplishment — and once in, the rigor, depth and expectations are vastly superior to anything “taught” in a public, where kids are given all As for having a pulse. It’s just not fair.
It's not hard to be admitted to the "elite privates" -- mainly, you just have to be rich. And the schools are not terribly impressive. Look at where their graduates get accepted to college.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The elite privates really shouldn’t have grades. To simply get admitted into an elite is an accomplishment — and once in, the rigor, depth and expectations are vastly superior to anything “taught” in a public, where kids are given all As for having a pulse. It’s just not fair.
It's not hard to be admitted to the "elite privates" -- mainly, you just have to be rich. And the schools are not terribly impressive. Look at where their graduates get accepted to college.
Huh?
https://www.andover.edu/files/CCOProfileBrochure2018-2019.pdf
https://www.exeter.edu/academics/college-counseling/beyond-exeter/college-matriculation
https://www.gprep.org/academics/college-counseling/class-of-2019-college-matriculation
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The elite privates really shouldn’t have grades. To simply get admitted into an elite is an accomplishment — and once in, the rigor, depth and expectations are vastly superior to anything “taught” in a public, where kids are given all As for having a pulse. It’s just not fair.
It's not hard to be admitted to the "elite privates" -- mainly, you just have to be rich. And the schools are not terribly impressive. Look at where their graduates get accepted to college.
Anonymous wrote:The elite privates really shouldn’t have grades. To simply get admitted into an elite is an accomplishment — and once in, the rigor, depth and expectations are vastly superior to anything “taught” in a public, where kids are given all As for having a pulse. It’s just not fair.
Anonymous wrote:Private schools can do this because their kids succeed based on privilege, legacy and money not merit. Removing grades means those kids have to try even less hard but they’re not at risk of losing out on college admissions or jobs because of their family privilege.
Anonymous wrote:The elite privates really shouldn’t have grades. To simply get admitted into an elite is an accomplishment — and once in, the rigor, depth and expectations are vastly superior to anything “taught” in a public, where kids are given all As for having a pulse. It’s just not fair.
Anonymous wrote:Isn’t Holton doing this? I think there is a school in Ny that does this St Anne. My worry would be is if a school is doing this to make everything even and then they can push to college who they want. I am not sure what I think. Would need more info on how good students would not be penalized