Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Downtown families def send their kids to Brooklyn Heights for Packer/st Ann's.
Which is funny because lots of Brooklyn Heights families send their kids downtown for public school. (Spruce Street e.g.)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:1 Trinity
2 Brearley
3 HM
4 Collegiate
5 Spence
6 Dalton
7 Chapin
8 Riverdale
9 Regis
10 St Ann's
11 Fieldstone
12 Marymount
13 Sacred Heart
14 Nightingale
15 Friends Seminary
16 GCS
17 Packer
18 Poly
19 Loyola
20 Avenues
21 BFS
22 BC
23 Basis
24 Hewitt
25 Trevor
26 Calhoun
27 Hackley
28 Lycée
29 UNIS
30 Xavier
31 Fordham Prep
32 Notre Dame
33 DA
34 SVF
35 Dwight
Do Regis, Marymount, and CSH actually underperform relative to their reputations when it comes to college placement? Regis in particular surprises me. My assumption would be that if you looked only at students who were admitted in 9th grade for K-12—and excluded K entrants—most of these other schools’ matriculation outcomes would look stronger.
I was surprised to so I just did some digging and put it on the instagram thread. they have very big numbers to schools like ND and Georgetown and I wouldn't be surprised if some boys are picking ND over other acceptances they may have from say Cornell or JHU.
Going from Catholic HS to Catholic college defeats the purpose of college. Broaden your horizons and get out of the echo chamber.
If I were Catholic and my son got into Regis I would send him in a heartbeat. But then he would not go to Catholic college.
Many parents care about community. Attending a schools that represents their values. Raw academic prowess at the expense of character (humility, empathetic, thoughtful, etc..) isn’t as desirable. NYC is especially known to have children grow up too fast and get exposed to drugs (party scene).
Anonymous wrote:Downtown families def send their kids to Brooklyn Heights for Packer/st Ann's.
Anonymous wrote:I actually think this is a fair ranking. Feel free to correct it
1 Trinity
2 Collegiate
3 Dalton
4 Spence
5 Brearley
6 HM
7 Chapin
8 St Ann's
9 Regis
10 Riverdale
11 Fieldstone
12 Marymount
13 Sacred Heart
14 Nightingale
15 Loyola
16 GCS
17 Packer
18 Poly
19 Avenues
20 Friends Seminary
21 BFS
22 BC
23 Basis
24 Hewitt
25Dwight
26 Calhoun
27 Hackley
28 Lycée
29 UNIS
30 Xavier
31 Fordham Prep
32 Notre Dame
33 DA
34 SVF
35 Trevor
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:1 Trinity
2 Brearley
3 HM
4 Collegiate
5 Spence
6 Dalton
7 Chapin
8 Riverdale
9 Regis
10 St Ann's
11 Fieldstone
12 Marymount
13 Sacred Heart
14 Nightingale
15 Friends Seminary
16 GCS
17 Packer
18 Poly
19 Loyola
20 Avenues
21 BFS
22 BC
23 Basis
24 Hewitt
25 Trevor
26 Calhoun
27 Hackley
28 Lycée
29 UNIS
30 Xavier
31 Fordham Prep
32 Notre Dame
33 DA
34 SVF
35 Dwight
Do Regis, Marymount, and CSH actually underperform relative to their reputations when it comes to college placement? Regis in particular surprises me. My assumption would be that if you looked only at students who were admitted in 9th grade for K-12—and excluded K entrants—most of these other schools’ matriculation outcomes would look stronger.
I was surprised to so I just did some digging and put it on the instagram thread. they have very big numbers to schools like ND and Georgetown and I wouldn't be surprised if some boys are picking ND over other acceptances they may have from say Cornell or JHU.
Going from Catholic HS to Catholic college defeats the purpose of college. Broaden your horizons and get out of the echo chamber.
If I were Catholic and my son got into Regis I would send him in a heartbeat. But then he would not go to Catholic college.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:1 Trinity
2 Brearley
3 HM
4 Collegiate
5 Spence
6 Dalton
7 Chapin
8 Riverdale
9 Regis
10 St Ann's
11 Fieldstone
12 Marymount
13 Sacred Heart
14 Nightingale
15 Friends Seminary
16 GCS
17 Packer
18 Poly
19 Loyola
20 Avenues
21 BFS
22 BC
23 Basis
24 Hewitt
25 Trevor
26 Calhoun
27 Hackley
28 Lycée
29 UNIS
30 Xavier
31 Fordham Prep
32 Notre Dame
33 DA
34 SVF
35 Dwight
Do Regis, Marymount, and CSH actually underperform relative to their reputations when it comes to college placement? Regis in particular surprises me. My assumption would be that if you looked only at students who were admitted in 9th grade for K-12—and excluded K entrants—most of these other schools’ matriculation outcomes would look stronger.
I was surprised to so I just did some digging and put it on the instagram thread. they have very big numbers to schools like ND and Georgetown and I wouldn't be surprised if some boys are picking ND over other acceptances they may have from say Cornell or JHU.
Going from Catholic HS to Catholic college defeats the purpose of college. Broaden your horizons and get out of the echo chamber.
If I were Catholic and my son got into Regis I would send him in a heartbeat. But then he would not go to Catholic college.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:1 Trinity
2 Brearley
3 HM
4 Collegiate
5 Spence
6 Dalton
7 Chapin
8 Riverdale
9 Regis
10 St Ann's
11 Fieldstone
12 Marymount
13 Sacred Heart
14 Nightingale
15 Friends Seminary
16 GCS
17 Packer
18 Poly
19 Loyola
20 Avenues
21 BFS
22 BC
23 Basis
24 Hewitt
25 Trevor
26 Calhoun
27 Hackley
28 Lycée
29 UNIS
30 Xavier
31 Fordham Prep
32 Notre Dame
33 DA
34 SVF
35 Dwight
Do Regis, Marymount, and CSH actually underperform relative to their reputations when it comes to college placement? Regis in particular surprises me. My assumption would be that if you looked only at students who were admitted in 9th grade for K-12—and excluded K entrants—most of these other schools’ matriculation outcomes would look stronger.
I was surprised to so I just did some digging and put it on the instagram thread. they have very big numbers to schools like ND and Georgetown and I wouldn't be surprised if some boys are picking ND over other acceptances they may have from say Cornell or JHU.
Going from Catholic HS to Catholic college defeats the purpose of college. Broaden your horizons and get out of the echo chamber.
If I were Catholic and my son got into Regis I would send him in a heartbeat. But then he would not go to Catholic college.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:1 Trinity
2 Brearley
3 HM
4 Collegiate
5 Spence
6 Dalton
7 Chapin
8 Riverdale
9 Regis
10 St Ann's
11 Fieldstone
12 Marymount
13 Sacred Heart
14 Nightingale
15 Friends Seminary
16 GCS
17 Packer
18 Poly
19 Loyola
20 Avenues
21 BFS
22 BC
23 Basis
24 Hewitt
25 Trevor
26 Calhoun
27 Hackley
28 Lycée
29 UNIS
30 Xavier
31 Fordham Prep
32 Notre Dame
33 DA
34 SVF
35 Dwight
Do Regis, Marymount, and CSH actually underperform relative to their reputations when it comes to college placement? Regis in particular surprises me. My assumption would be that if you looked only at students who were admitted in 9th grade for K-12—and excluded K entrants—most of these other schools’ matriculation outcomes would look stronger.
I was surprised to so I just did some digging and put it on the instagram thread. they have very big numbers to schools like ND and Georgetown and I wouldn't be surprised if some boys are picking ND over other acceptances they may have from say Cornell or JHU.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:1 Trinity
2 Brearley
3 HM
4 Collegiate
5 Spence
6 Dalton
7 Chapin
8 Riverdale
9 Regis
10 St Ann's
11 Fieldstone
12 Marymount
13 Sacred Heart
14 Nightingale
15 Friends Seminary
16 GCS
17 Packer
18 Poly
19 Loyola
20 Avenues
21 BFS
22 BC
23 Basis
24 Hewitt
25 Trevor
26 Calhoun
27 Hackley
28 Lycée
29 UNIS
30 Xavier
31 Fordham Prep
32 Notre Dame
33 DA
34 SVF
35 Dwight
Do Regis, Marymount, and CSH actually underperform relative to their reputations when it comes to college placement? Regis in particular surprises me. My assumption would be that if you looked only at students who were admitted in 9th grade for K-12—and excluded K entrants—most of these other schools’ matriculation outcomes would look stronger.
I was surprised to so I just did some digging and put it on the instagram thread. they have very big numbers to schools like ND and Georgetown and I wouldn't be surprised if some boys are picking ND over other acceptances they may have from say Cornell or JHU.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:1 Trinity
2 Brearley
3 HM
4 Collegiate
5 Spence
6 Dalton
7 Chapin
8 Riverdale
9 Regis
10 St Ann's
11 Fieldstone
12 Marymount
13 Sacred Heart
14 Nightingale
15 Friends Seminary
16 GCS
17 Packer
18 Poly
19 Loyola
20 Avenues
21 BFS
22 BC
23 Basis
24 Hewitt
25 Trevor
26 Calhoun
27 Hackley
28 Lycée
29 UNIS
30 Xavier
31 Fordham Prep
32 Notre Dame
33 DA
34 SVF
35 Dwight
Do Regis, Marymount, and CSH actually underperform relative to their reputations when it comes to college placement? Regis in particular surprises me. My assumption would be that if you looked only at students who were admitted in 9th grade for K-12—and excluded K entrants—most of these other schools’ matriculation outcomes would look stronger.
Anonymous wrote:This looks like a very specific DC Urban Moms / NYC private-school parent prestige ranking, not a ranking of current academic quality or where families are applying today.
A few things jump out immediately:
1. Trevor at #35 is wildly out of sync with current reality
That’s the biggest thing.
Whether someone loves Trevor or not, putting it:
* below Dwight
* below Calhoun
* below Lycée
* below UNIS
* below Xavier
* below Fordham Prep
* below Notre Dame
would surprise most people involved in Manhattan admissions today.
This feels like a ranking frozen around the early 2000s, when Trevor had a much weaker reputation.
2. Nightingale is too low
Nightingale at #14 is hard to justify.
Most current observers would place Nightingale closer to:
* Dalton
* Spence
* Chapin
* Sacred Heart
than to schools ranked 15–25.
3. Sacred Heart is too low
Same issue.
Many NYC families would rank Sacred Heart above:
* Marymount
* Grace Church
* Packer
* Poly
* Avenues
without much hesitation.
4. Avenues is probably too low
Avenues is polarizing, but #19 feels low.
Many current families would place it somewhere in the 10–15 range.
5. Grace Church is probably too low
Grace at #16 feels low given current demand and outcomes.
6. The top is mostly old-school prestige
The placement of:
* Trinity
* Collegiate
* Dalton
* Spence
* Brearley
* Horace Mann
* Chapin
is very much a traditional prestige ranking.
You can argue over the exact order, but that’s clearly the logic.
What the ranking is really measuring
If I had to guess, this ranking is measuring:
“If you gathered wealthy NYC private-school alumni aged 50–75 and asked them to rank schools by prestige.”
For that purpose, it actually makes sense.
That’s why:
* Trevor is #35.
* Grace is #16.
* Avenues is #19.
* Nightingale is #14.
* Sacred Heart is #13.
Those schools have improved dramatically relative to where they sat in the old hierarchy.
My biggest disagreement
If we’re talking 2025–2026 perception among active Manhattan parents, I’d probably move:
Up
* Nightingale
* Sacred Heart
* Grace Church
* Avenues
* Trevor
Down
* Loyola (slightly)
* Xavier
* Notre Dame
* Dwight
* UNIS
The Trevor placement is the one that makes me think the list is mostly historical prestige. I could see reasonable people putting Trevor at #10, #15, even #20. But #35 says more about where Trevor was a generation ago than where it is today.
So my overall take is:
As a historical-prestige ranking: 8/10.
As a current-market Manhattan parent ranking: maybe 5/10.
The further down the list you go, the more it seems to undervalue schools whose reputations have risen in the last 10–20 years.