Anonymous wrote:We love Latin. Happy to answer any questions military dad (we do have military families at Latin). You are right that it's definitely not the 'suburban' type school you speak of, but the first graduating class was assertively and well-placed. The subsequent classes will find the best possible fit that they are qualified for. Latin is a very small school, which is part of its appeal to us. I feel like our kid is having a great and unique experience at Latin that would not be available in the suburbs (it's just unique) and is courtesy of the bottom-up charter movement. I think most DC charters that expand to HS will offer this 'intimate/unique' appeal.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Yes but no 5-star schools yet like Ivies, top liberal arts colleges e.g. Pamona, Amherst, military academies or top technical schools like MIT. They shoot for small 2nd and 3rd tier liberal arts colleges and area state schools, not every parent's cup of tea.
Every parent who has her heart dead-set on choosing her child's academic career at an Ivy, and is unable to pay for the private school she really wants, would be much happier in the suburbs than in DC. Montgomery County awaits you, sweetheart. They do have nice car dealerships and steak houses out there, I'm told.
I'm a military dad, honey, with a kid who thrives on sports and math and loves history. Maybe a military academy bound child? Why MoCo, why not a single DC middle and high school sequence with the goods? There is no reason DC can't have at least one or two suburban-quality public high schools here in 2012 - we have the cash/facilities, the kids, the educators, the parents. Unfortunately, we also have relatively low expectations perpetuated by dingbats like you.
I'm from a military family. I also have a scholarship and two degrees from the very institutions you're slavering over. Watch you call a dingbat, buddy - you might just be saying more about yourself.
Mlitary Dad, you will never find the lack of respect for our institutions and diverse life experiences you just encountered from the previous poster at Washington Latin. The school's value system simply does not allow that sort of foolishness.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:.
Yes but no 5-star schools yet like Ivies, top liberal arts colleges e.g. Pamona, Amherst, military academies or top technical schools like MIT. They shoot for small 2nd and 3rd tier liberal arts colleges and area state schools, not every parent's cup of tea.
Anonymous wrote:.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What's their college acceptance rate?
100% in four-year colleges with 5m+ in scholarships.
Yes but no 5-star schools yet like Ivies, top liberal arts colleges e.g. Pamona, Amherst, military academies or top technical schools like MIT. They shoot for small 2nd and 3rd tier liberal arts colleges and area state schools, not every parent's cup of tea.
Anonymous wrote:+1 more. Getting that amount of scholarship money and college acceptances for the first ever graduating class speaks of enormous dedication on behalf of the administration and faculty. Latin's head came from NCS---she knows how the college game works and I bet those stats only improve going forward.