Anonymous wrote:Just for the fun of it I looked at the St. Anselm's college list.
Are people at St. A so snotty that they would turn their nose up at a kid going to those colleges?
To the, PP, I agree I want my kids to broaden their views, which is why we will probably leave our school for a different HS even though it goes through 12th, only 10 kids will leave. Most of St. A kids are together since they were 4, not since 4th, since they were 4 years old, until they are 18.
Anonymous wrote:At SAAS, I have seen protestants, neoprotestants, judaics, budhists, muslims, catholics (just baptized, but not confirmed), orthodoxes, and atheists. They are all welcome and I have not detected any hidden thoughts of conversion to Catholicism from the faculty as they are as well protestants, neoprotestants, etc.. Every single day of the SAAS' boys is filled with the joy of discovery.
Anonymous wrote:Can we stop putting people into boxes. Isn't education about broadening our views, not narrowing them ?
Anonymous wrote:Just for the fun of it I looked at the St. Anselm's college list.
Are people at St. A so snotty that they would turn their nose up at a kid going to those colleges?
To the, PP, I agree I want my kids to broaden their views, which is why we will probably leave our school for a different HS even though it goes through 12th, only 10 kids will leave. Most of St. A kids are together since they were 4, not since 4th, since they were 4 years old, until they are 18.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Seems to me that no one has mentioned the obvious.
Saint Anselms and Georgetown Prep are Catholic schools. St Albans is not.
If the family is Catholic and consider themselves part of the DC area Catholic community, than St. Albans would seem to be a non-starter.
That would leave SAA and Prep.
If the family is not Catholic, then at least at Prep, he would be part of a tiny minority. And that's not a lot of fun.
There are actually quite a few Catholic students at St. Albans.
Anonymous wrote:Just for the fun of it I looked at the St. Anselm's college list.
Are people at St. A so snotty that they would turn their nose up at a kid going to those colleges?
To the, PP, I agree I want my kids to broaden their views, which is why we will probably leave our school for a different HS even though it goes through 12th, only 10 kids will leave. Most of St. A kids are together since they were 4, not since 4th, since they were 4 years old, until they are 18.
Anonymous wrote:Seems to me that no one has mentioned the obvious.
Saint Anselms and Georgetown Prep are Catholic schools. St Albans is not.
If the family is Catholic and consider themselves part of the DC area Catholic community, than St. Albans would seem to be a non-starter.
That would leave SAA and Prep.
If the family is not Catholic, then at least at Prep, he would be part of a tiny minority. And that's not a lot of fun.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I've been an alumni interviewer for my undergraduate college (an Ivy) for a while. We take a ton of kids from ST Albans every year - the kids at the top of the class have great grades and scores and good extracurricular involvement. We also like St Anselm's kids, since they not only have good grades, but there is quite a bit of good character education and community service going on there. It's also okay to be quirky there. Georgetown Prep isn't considered to be in the same league academically, and there are a lot of public schools in Montgomery County that have a much better track record with us than GP.
Relative to a Prep "track record, there's a strong preference among Prep people for schools like Notre Dame, Georgetown and BC which they prefer to many of the Ivies. Many Prep parents are reluctant to consider Ivies because of the Liberal bias there. I have heard many times, "Why would we want to send our son or daughter somewhere that our values are going to be under constant assault".