Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ugh so many teachers went to Bob Jones University where interracial dating was prohibited until 2000.
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Anonymous wrote:Ugh so many teachers went to Bob Jones University where interracial dating was prohibited until 2000.
Anonymous wrote:Ugh so many teachers went to Bob Jones University where interracial dating was prohibited until 2000.
Anonymous wrote:Ugh so many teachers went to Bob Jones University where interracial dating was prohibited until 2000.
Anonymous wrote:The kids are really great. I once misplaced my purse and it was left unattended for hours. Nothing was touched.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Leaving politics aside - I see this school in Wikipedia is characterized as "non-denominational". From what we saw the majority is Protestants. How does this school treat Christians of other beliefs (e.g. Catholic, Orthodox etc.)?
I went to this school around a decade ago. Assuming nothing has changed, I vividly remember a moment from 8th grade. We had exactly one Catholic girl in my class, and I thought, "Wow, we're so diverse! One Catholic student! That's diversity!" Then, I entered the real world. 😂 Of course, it's been a decade, and things have probably changed. But, the student body was super homogeneous.
Anonymous wrote:It seems like an excellent school academically - very rigorous and with a strong science program (yes, they teach real science). Teachers and administrators seem dedicated. I was especially impressed with Dr. Vander Poel and the English teacher. The admissions staff were extremely nice.
I have a similar impression of TCS and their graduates go on to some pretty good colleges too. https://www.tcsfairfax.org/academics/college-counseling/college-acceptances
We looked at it but decided on a school closer to home.
Anonymous wrote:DP. It is so interesting that people whonwork with technology so often are Luddites outside work. I hear it is pretty common in Silly Valley also.
Anonymous wrote:Everyone I know who has a kid there seems very happy with it.
This is an understated MAGA crowd, as with most evangelicals these days. There seems to be an undercurrent of "of course Trump is the greatest, why would anyone think differently? No need to even discuss it! Oh, also, Jesus."
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How much screen time does TCS do?
2 school days are virtual half days - they were really proud of how prepared their school was for virtual learning during spring 2020. That's for the entire school.
Kids get a device in 6th grade and have to bring one in 7th. There's a student portal starting at those ages.
Before then there is a computer lab that the elementary kids can access.
So different than the surrounding public schools "every kid gets a device starting in kindergarten, their own email, and access to the learning system that they will be using to turn in some assignments starting in primary school," but not no-tech.
Even Kindergarten??
No one is in the school building on those days - the virtual day is K-12. Our kids didn't do kindergarten there so I don't know the exact details for that age.
The website says, "Trinity resumed on-campus learning on Monday, August 24, 2020 with five full days of instruction weekly" and during the tour I recently went on, nothing was mentioned about virtual days when I specifically asked about technology use—is it possible they phased those virtual days out after your student graduated?