Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My very smart kid went to Walls and then to a selective SLAC and was NOT prepared at all. he didn't know how to organize his time and had bad study habits, and didn't really know how to write papers. It took him at least one semester to figure it out and it was very challenging. He ended up doing very well and has a great job now (2 years out) so it all worked out in the end but DCPS certainly didn't teach him the skills he needed to succeed
Wait a minute, my kid is at Walls and I know a few other kids that have graduated from there. None of the previous graduates indicate any of the issues you describe. In particular, the time management piece and writing papers. You will drown at Walls without time management skills. They have senior projects and a lot of papers over the years. Walls certainly has issues but not the ones described. Sounds like the independence was just too much initially and he had to stop the partying. That's not on any high school.
One thing I can say about Walls is that other students that year were great-- smart, ambitious, and they all pushed each other intellectually.Anonymous wrote:My very smart kid went to Walls and then to a selective SLAC and was NOT prepared at all. he didn't know how to organize his time and had bad study habits, and didn't really know how to write papers. It took him at least one semester to figure it out and it was very challenging. He ended up doing very well and has a great job now (2 years out) so it all worked out in the end but DCPS certainly didn't teach him the skills he needed to succeed
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My very smart kid went to Walls and then to a selective SLAC and was NOT prepared at all. he didn't know how to organize his time and had bad study habits, and didn't really know how to write papers. It took him at least one semester to figure it out and it was very challenging. He ended up doing very well and has a great job now (2 years out) so it all worked out in the end but DCPS certainly didn't teach him the skills he needed to succeed
I mean...he must have been prepared somewhat. You don't go from struggling in the first semester to doing very well overall with no preparation. I don't know if the W schools can claim they prepare a student better for a selective SLAC...and I have no doubt your kid would have been better prepared if they went to Sidwell. The real question though is would it have made sense for you to pay $200k for Sidwell just to not struggle for one semester? I don't have an answer.
Anonymous wrote:My very smart kid went to Walls and then to a selective SLAC and was NOT prepared at all. he didn't know how to organize his time and had bad study habits, and didn't really know how to write papers. It took him at least one semester to figure it out and it was very challenging. He ended up doing very well and has a great job now (2 years out) so it all worked out in the end but DCPS certainly didn't teach him the skills he needed to succeed
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:All I can say is my dc, who just finishing up freshman year at DESA says 8th grade at their private school was much more rigorous. I’m a little concerned about college readiness but hoping that by sticking to honors/AP classes, dc will be ok in college.
I am not aware of anyone that attends DESA (this is Duke Ellington...correct?) for the rigor of their academic classes or even cares much about that. Everyone I know attends because they want to be professional actors, musicians, etc. This is kind of an odd post.
Not all kids go on to be artists/actors/musicians. Even if they do end up on that track, they still need to go to college, and even at an art school, you have to take academic classes (speaking as an art school graduate). That was a weird response.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:All I can say is my dc, who just finishing up freshman year at DESA says 8th grade at their private school was much more rigorous. I’m a little concerned about college readiness but hoping that by sticking to honors/AP classes, dc will be ok in college.
I am not aware of anyone that attends DESA (this is Duke Ellington...correct?) for the rigor of their academic classes or even cares much about that. Everyone I know attends because they want to be professional actors, musicians, etc. This is kind of an odd post.
Not all kids go on to be artists/actors/musicians. Even if they do end up on that track, they still need to go to college, and even at an art school, you have to take academic classes (speaking as an art school graduate). That was a weird response.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The timing of and commute to college classes at GW is the main problem from J-R. Kids can't just walk away from campus during the school day and magically get over to GW and back in time for their next J-R class or activity.
Yes, how does this work at all? Can someone whose kid has done it (or knows kids who have) explain the logistics?
Thank you!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:All I can say is my dc, who just finishing up freshman year at DESA says 8th grade at their private school was much more rigorous. I’m a little concerned about college readiness but hoping that by sticking to honors/AP classes, dc will be ok in college.
I am not aware of anyone that attends DESA (this is Duke Ellington...correct?) for the rigor of their academic classes or even cares much about that. Everyone I know attends because they want to be professional actors, musicians, etc. This is kind of an odd post.
Not all kids go on to be artists/actors/musicians. Even if they do end up on that track, they still need to go to college, and even at an art school, you have to take academic classes (speaking as an art school graduate). That was a weird response.
Anonymous wrote:The timing of and commute to college classes at GW is the main problem from J-R. Kids can't just walk away from campus during the school day and magically get over to GW and back in time for their next J-R class or activity.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:All I can say is my dc, who just finishing up freshman year at DESA says 8th grade at their private school was much more rigorous. I’m a little concerned about college readiness but hoping that by sticking to honors/AP classes, dc will be ok in college.
I am not aware of anyone that attends DESA (this is Duke Ellington...correct?) for the rigor of their academic classes or even cares much about that. Everyone I know attends because they want to be professional actors, musicians, etc. This is kind of an odd post.
Anonymous wrote:All I can say is my dc, who just finishing up freshman year at DESA says 8th grade at their private school was much more rigorous. I’m a little concerned about college readiness but hoping that by sticking to honors/AP classes, dc will be ok in college.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:All depends on the kid, the family, and the luck they have in DCPS. What's taught in DCPS is so patchy, with so many weak admins, weak students and unmotivated teachers onboard, that outcomes vary widely. Honors classes in the better suburban schools districts are simply a much safer bet. If you're not tied down in DC as a homeowner, a commute, a spouse's job etc. moving for schools if you can't swing a private is often worth it.
So...to summarize, you are not a parent of a DCPS graduate who is at or graduated from college. Thanks for an outsider's $.02 that nobody requested.
To answer the question, I have a JR grad attending a Top 10 school in the Fall. I feel my kid is well-prepared for their intended area of study. My kid took several dual enrollment classes at GW and earned As without much trouble, so has a decent amount of confidence heading into the Fall.
A neighbor's kid (JR grad) just graduated with honors from an Ivy in a STEM field. Have no idea if there was an adjustment period Freshman year, but certainly finished well overall.
I wonder about dual enrollment each time I see threads like this. Seems like a good option to supplement at DCPS with almost no cost to family . Not sure why people don’t talk about it more as a benefit. So it makes me wonder if I am missing something, like it is hard to get in, or not well run or…
What’s the scoop?