Anonymous wrote:Yeesh. I’m sure that makes them super popular with the other schools in their leagues.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Agree with the PPs to push the issue for this year because it’s such short notice, do the early pickup, and take your time over this coming admissions season to find a better fit if the sport it your/her priority, or consider whether dropping the sport makes more sense. For this year, you can assure the school that you understand it will be more disruptive in future years and will look into alternative solutions, but because of the short notice of the bell change and that you’ve already committed to this sport for this year, you need the 15 minutes for this year. Buy yourself some time to address it more permanently by changing schools or dropping/relocating the sport.
I had friends at NCS who participated at elite levels in figure skating, equestrian, and diving, and NCS at the time accommodated the schedule adjustments needed, but that was in MS and HS, not elementary. It was also in the 1990s.
I know currently NCS won’t even release there HS varsity teams early for away games.
How do the girls manage to compete if they can’t make it to away games on time? That seems extreme. But then, I guess it’s just another example of NCS being NCS.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Agree with the PPs to push the issue for this year because it’s such short notice, do the early pickup, and take your time over this coming admissions season to find a better fit if the sport it your/her priority, or consider whether dropping the sport makes more sense. For this year, you can assure the school that you understand it will be more disruptive in future years and will look into alternative solutions, but because of the short notice of the bell change and that you’ve already committed to this sport for this year, you need the 15 minutes for this year. Buy yourself some time to address it more permanently by changing schools or dropping/relocating the sport.
I had friends at NCS who participated at elite levels in figure skating, equestrian, and diving, and NCS at the time accommodated the schedule adjustments needed, but that was in MS and HS, not elementary. It was also in the 1990s.
I know currently NCS won’t even release there HS varsity teams early for away games.
Anonymous wrote:Sidwell ! The tennis players leave after lunch most days of the week. That’s why they choose Sidwell.
NCS is hard no.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Given that it's August, just pull her 15 minutes early this year and then start looking for another school for next year that is either closer to her practice location so that release time is not an issue or a school that will work with you on scheduling as she gets older. A number of years ago, Maret worked with an athlete I knew to allow him early release in high school. It's a little easier when student schedules are a little more individualized and you can put things like PE and study hall at the end a student's day. Harder in elementary when everyone in the class follows the same schedule.
Thank you, this is practical and useful. It’s frustrating to know that she has teammates at 20+ schools, many of whom are in similar situations, and hers is apparently the only one pushing back. We originally applied to this school because it was known for celebrating its students extracurricular accomplishments and well-roundedness, but the tone of the admin has shifted post-Covid. I think that the work to manage behavioral and emotional issues in the student body has been more/longer than they ever anticipated and so they are enforcing more rigid boundaries in other areas to accommodate that. Bad luck for us.
Why not look at these 20+ schools?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Agree with the PPs to push the issue for this year because it’s such short notice, do the early pickup, and take your time over this coming admissions season to find a better fit if the sport it your/her priority, or consider whether dropping the sport makes more sense. For this year, you can assure the school that you understand it will be more disruptive in future years and will look into alternative solutions, but because of the short notice of the bell change and that you’ve already committed to this sport for this year, you need the 15 minutes for this year. Buy yourself some time to address it more permanently by changing schools or dropping/relocating the sport.
I had friends at NCS who participated at elite levels in figure skating, equestrian, and diving, and NCS at the time accommodated the schedule adjustments needed, but that was in MS and HS, not elementary. It was also in the 1990s.
I know currently NCS won’t even release there HS varsity teams early for away games.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Given that it's August, just pull her 15 minutes early this year and then start looking for another school for next year that is either closer to her practice location so that release time is not an issue or a school that will work with you on scheduling as she gets older. A number of years ago, Maret worked with an athlete I knew to allow him early release in high school. It's a little easier when student schedules are a little more individualized and you can put things like PE and study hall at the end a student's day. Harder in elementary when everyone in the class follows the same schedule.
Thank you, this is practical and useful. It’s frustrating to know that she has teammates at 20+ schools, many of whom are in similar situations, and hers is apparently the only one pushing back. We originally applied to this school because it was known for celebrating its students extracurricular accomplishments and well-roundedness, but the tone of the admin has shifted post-Covid. I think that the work to manage behavioral and emotional issues in the student body has been more/longer than they ever anticipated and so they are enforcing more rigid boundaries in other areas to accommodate that. Bad luck for us.
Anonymous wrote:Agree with the PPs to push the issue for this year because it’s such short notice, do the early pickup, and take your time over this coming admissions season to find a better fit if the sport it your/her priority, or consider whether dropping the sport makes more sense. For this year, you can assure the school that you understand it will be more disruptive in future years and will look into alternative solutions, but because of the short notice of the bell change and that you’ve already committed to this sport for this year, you need the 15 minutes for this year. Buy yourself some time to address it more permanently by changing schools or dropping/relocating the sport.
I had friends at NCS who participated at elite levels in figure skating, equestrian, and diving, and NCS at the time accommodated the schedule adjustments needed, but that was in MS and HS, not elementary. It was also in the 1990s.