Anonymous wrote:Let me guess, St. Andrews?
Anonymous wrote:45 seniors is too many for one counselor to advise, particularly if one of them also has director duties. Sidwell needs to expand the number of counselors from three to four, and ideally to five, as well as increase outreach earlier in the year to the junior class. The college admissions process has changed a lot in five years, and Sidwell needs to step up and adapt. I hope that outgoing senior parents and rising junior parents take the opportunity
to remind the administration that more resources are needed.
Anonymous wrote:Responding to dp about less work at public schools: what exactly are you suggesting though? I can see the argument that an A at, say, a big 3 school, is harder to come by than an A at many publics. But many kids at public can earn the same (or better) scores on sat, act, etc perhaps with fewer study hours. . They can become national merit finalists. They can Max out sat ii scores. Are you saying those kids are less deserving of college placement or college counseling because their A's came more easily? Or because they didn't study quite as many hours (and that doesn't say they lack a work ethic; that's not the issue).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As a parent of a rising 9th grader, I would be devastated if she doesn't get her first choice in the college admission process. She is smart enough to ALWAYS get her first choice so it won't be a stretch for her advisor. I am glad the school made the change now. They still have three years to make sure all the money we invested will send her on the way to her dreams.
^ You're being facetious, right? (Sometimes it's hard to tell on the internet).
You know what's funny? As a Sidwell parent with one grad and one child still in the US, I can no longer tell if this is a troll or not. This actually sounds like conversations I've had with SFS parents.
Of course, it is true. We have been given tons of money to the school, we deserve outstanding service.
So then do you believe the flip side: kids who go to public school don't deserve to get into their first choice schools? Is the money all that matters?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As a parent of a rising 9th grader, I would be devastated if she doesn't get her first choice in the college admission process. She is smart enough to ALWAYS get her first choice so it won't be a stretch for her advisor. I am glad the school made the change now. They still have three years to make sure all the money we invested will send her on the way to her dreams.
^ You're being facetious, right? (Sometimes it's hard to tell on the internet).
You know what's funny? As a Sidwell parent with one grad and one child still in the US, I can no longer tell if this is a troll or not. This actually sounds like conversations I've had with SFS parents.
Of course, it is true. We have been given tons of money to the school, we deserve outstanding service.
Anonymous wrote:Still can’t tell
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As a parent of a rising 9th grader, I would be devastated if she doesn't get her first choice in the college admission process. She is smart enough to ALWAYS get her first choice so it won't be a stretch for her advisor. I am glad the school made the change now. They still have three years to make sure all the money we invested will send her on the way to her dreams.
^ You're being facetious, right? (Sometimes it's hard to tell on the internet).
You know what's funny? As a Sidwell parent with one grad and one child still in the US, I can no longer tell if this is a troll or not. This actually sounds like conversations I've had with SFS parents.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As a parent of a rising 9th grader, I would be devastated if she doesn't get her first choice in the college admission process. She is smart enough to ALWAYS get her first choice so it won't be a stretch for her advisor. I am glad the school made the change now. They still have three years to make sure all the money we invested will send her on the way to her dreams.
^ You're being facetious, right? (Sometimes it's hard to tell on the internet).
You know what's funny? As a Sidwell parent with one grad and one child still in the US, I can no longer tell if this is a troll or not. This actually sounds like conversations I've had with SFS parents.
Which is why we declined both Sidwell and GDS this year...while we certainly met many families who seemed pleasant we also met too many who sounded just like the above. We opted for a different school where the families seemed more consistently relaxed and grounded.