Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Abbey Mom here. I’m not sure what’s behind the above statements - they don’t match our reality. Our child has bloomed here and we are happy with the school, community, faculty and staff.
Everyone’s kid is different - often the most helpful thing is to talk to families in real life about their experiences and see if it resonates for you and your family.
Yeah, the school has been amazing for our son. The academics are good and rigorous, but he has matured so much—it's really stunning, and it's absolutely the school. He's surrounded by good, hardworking kids and really positive values are stressed. We're not Catholic, and it's not an issue.
Anonymous wrote:Abbey Mom here. I’m not sure what’s behind the above statements - they don’t match our reality. Our child has bloomed here and we are happy with the school, community, faculty and staff.
Everyone’s kid is different - often the most helpful thing is to talk to families in real life about their experiences and see if it resonates for you and your family.
Anonymous wrote:Yeah, SAAS may send a few kids to top schools but many are headed to second-tier Jesuits like SLU, Xavier, Loyola(s), Providence, etc…You can queue the “that’s what they choose” or “it’s socioeconomically diverse” but the outcomes don’t equal the narrative that it’s only “for the most intellectual and curious boys.”