Anonymous wrote:I’ll second the great arts program if that is your student’s thing. It is top notch and no comparison to public offerings. But the teacher excellence was significantly impacted by the financial mismanagement issues that have already been raised on this board last year. And from my perspective, there isn’t a tight community at Bullis, but rather a series of adjacent cliche-y communities that make the social scene small and frankly weird. Any school choice is a gamble, but go in with your eyes extra open here.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Who cares about LAX. How many play it past high school or college? You all place far to much focus on sports.
Seriously. If you’re not a serious sports family it’s really hard to see the point of most private high schools.
Value of nothing, price of everything, huh?
I interpret this to mean you call me a cynic, quoting Oscar Wilde. As if I see only the price of a school like Bullis and not its true value. Can you explain its true value to a family of a bright student, with a relatively good public option, and absolutely no interest in sports?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Who cares about LAX. How many play it past high school or college? You all place far to much focus on sports.
Seriously. If you’re not a serious sports family it’s really hard to see the point of most private high schools.
Value of nothing, price of everything, huh?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What is the Big 3? Keep seeing it mentioned in posts
https://www.dcurbanmom.com/jforum/posts/list/99579.page
Anonymous wrote:What is the Big 3? Keep seeing it mentioned in posts
Anonymous wrote:Sorry for the naive question, as my kids are still fairly young, but it sounds like lacrosse is used as a hook for upper-class white kids to get into selective colleges that would otherwise be rejecting them?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Who cares about LAX. How many play it past high school or college? You all place far to much focus on sports.
Seriously. If you’re not a serious sports family it’s really hard to see the point of most private high schools.