Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What will this do for college admissions? Wont colleges know what’s going on? Won’t they question the quality of the school?
Think about the question you are asking. Do you really think colleges question the "quality" of the thousands of high schools from which they receive applicants? And if so, what is their measure of "quality"?![]()
Um…you don’t think that colleges fully understand the profile and rigor of the schools from which their applicants come? You think they take a 4.0 at a random under-resourced rural public school as the same as an elite private? Of course not. Colleges know the high schools exceptionally well and will definitely know about the drama with SSFS. Doesn’t mean it’s a negative, just that it’s certainly known.
Anonymous wrote:There will be 326 kids this year spread out over how many grades?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What will this do for college admissions? Wont colleges know what’s going on? Won’t they question the quality of the school?
Think about the question you are asking. Do you really think colleges question the "quality" of the thousands of high schools from which they receive applicants? And if so, what is their measure of "quality"?![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Serious question as a family choosing not to go back to high school this year. Those of you who are returning - are you not troubled that for all the talk about finances past and future, no one is talking about why the school lost 200 enrollments from fall of 2023 to Spring of 2025? 690 kids to 495 — and that’s why they thought they had to close the school. Now with reopening they are at 326.
They had to shut the school because of a huge exodus of families and there has been zero discussion of the underlying reasons for that. I have been at every board meeting, coalition call, and all over Slack.
The fact that there was something so broken that almost 1/3 of families left and no one wants to talk about that - we couldn’t overcome that. But I am finding it so amazing that so many families don’t have insurmountable problems with that.
SSFS was a literal lifesaver for one of our kids many years ago, so I was sad to read about its closing and elated that the closing has been averted.
That you continue to participate in discussions about the school having already made the decision to leave is not productive and certainly does the school no favors. Why must you persist in doing so?
I’m not the poster but asking about the school is what people do cause they care. And not having a kid at the school doesn’t mean there isn’t interest (why did alums jump in to save thr school. Why do YOU care if you don’t have a child here now).
But if no one can ask “what went wrong?” How is the school supposed to prevent it from happening again?
How long and how many times are we going to keep asking "what went wrong"? This has been well covered in meetings and the school is now moving forward with many well thought out plans. Those that keep asking this question over and over again and particularly those that have left, have questionable intent.
No it hasn’t. I have been at all the forums. The debt and what got us into the financial hole we are in has been discussed. But no one has discussed — and thus have solved for — the issues of school culture that resulted in over 100 kids being pulled this year before the announcement. And yes there is new leadership coming, but selected by the old board. I hope things improve, but for sure don’t understand why so many families left.
Anonymous wrote:you'd be crazy to switch in when you are new.
I get some people sticking around if they are already there and in high school, but to start there as a new student when the school is in such dire financial straits?
Anonymous wrote:NP and the way I see it is that if you’re considering a switch in late May, things are probably so bad at your current school that whatever you encounter at SSFS will be fine.
Anonymous wrote:I’ve not heard anyone openly address the enrollment drop from ~700 2 years ago to 460 at the time of closure. I’m not sure we will ever hear why from the school. But if you just ask around you’ll know the top reasons why people left. But not on this forum. That’s always been off limits to talk about it here.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:you'd be crazy to switch in when you are new.
I get some people sticking around if they are already there and in high school, but to start there as a new student when the school is in such dire financial straits?
Stop trying to approach this rationally. Go with your heart, not your brain.
-SSFS parents in 5 minutes, probably
That’s bad advice for the majority of things in life. I understand that people make decisions for a myriad of reasons but to choose ssfs without rational thinking is ridiculous.
If the school can hold up for you after using your brain I think you should go for it. It’s just a school and no matter what happens if things don’t work out you can find another. But if you aren’t sure after a cost benefit analysis maybe you should not come or stay.
But to advise ppl to just use their heart like it’s a rom com - that’s not solid advice.
Anonymous wrote:Any recent updates on SSFS? Is it accurate to assume they are stable for the next 3 years? We are looking at a possible HS switch for a rising 10th grader.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:you'd be crazy to switch in when you are new.
I get some people sticking around if they are already there and in high school, but to start there as a new student when the school is in such dire financial straits?
Stop trying to approach this rationally. Go with your heart, not your brain.
-SSFS parents in 5 minutes, probably
Anonymous wrote:you'd be crazy to switch in when you are new.
I get some people sticking around if they are already there and in high school, but to start there as a new student when the school is in such dire financial straits?