Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Would a non-quirky, athletic boy fit in socially at SAAS? We have read a lot about the St. Anselm’s ‘type’ of boy and our son while bright, is not a studious, book loving, quirky kid.
Yes, there all kinds of boys there, including some serious athletes.
Anonymous wrote:I think you have other schools that would fit better. HS Curriculum is through Latin level 4, 4 years of religion, modern language though level 4. A lot of required classes to graduate.
Anonymous wrote:Would a non-quirky, athletic boy fit in socially at SAAS? We have read a lot about the St. Anselm’s ‘type’ of boy and our son while bright, is not a studious, book loving, quirky kid.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Read on another thread that this school is for gifted boys. Is this correct?
While there are undoubtedly gifted boys at SAAS, our DS goes there and we would not say he is gifted. Very bright, hard-working, loves learning, and intellectually curious is how I would describe him and many of his classmates. The school is a wonderful environment for smart boys who want to put in the hard work to succeed at SAAS. But for all the academic rigor, the school is not a pressure cooker, the school encourages fun, and there's lots of support. [/quote
Frequently get homework assigned on weekends, meaning when school is out, a new assignment will show up through email on a Saturday that is due next school day. Typically have 3-4 hours of homework for middle school-this is ongoing throughout the school year.
Anonymous wrote:Regarding the point above about scholarships, there is a profile in the catholic standard about the student in the 2020 class who is going to Vanderbilt, which mentions that he is on a full tuition merit scholarship...
Anonymous wrote:Regarding the point above about scholarships, there is a profile in the catholic standard about the student in the 2020 class who is going to Vanderbilt, which mentions that he is on a full tuition merit scholarship...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am curious why then college acceptance rates do not bare this out. The school appears to be academically rigorous, well run and is churning out nice boys with high SAT scores.
SAAS annual reports are posted publicly and include matriculation lists (see, e.g., page 37 here: https://resources.finalsite.net/images/v1600196924/stanselms/qvg5r3t8chu6ggvm0hfk/AR1920.pdf )
Last year's class of 37 included matriculations to Columbia, Penn, Duke, Chicago, Georgetown (2), Rice, Vandy, UVA, W&M (2), Notre Dame (2), Haverford, Boston College (3), Tulane, and Lehigh. That's over half the class (and there are plenty of other fine schools on the rest of the list). Have a look. I don't know where this "unimpressive placements" nonsense comes from.
PP I think these are acceptances not enrollments. A student might have got accepted at Columbia but did not actually enroll there per the matriculation list on Anselms website - Columbia is not listed.
Anonymous wrote:I am curious why then college acceptance rates do not bare this out. The school appears to be academically rigorous, well run and is churning out nice boys with high SAT scores.