Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You're using the word "agnostic" incorrectly.
I think you should stop trying so hard. You can't micromanage to this degree. It will drive you nuts.
Actually the usage is fine in the sense of not committed. It's fairly common use but a bit pretentious.
I don't think so. How can you believe in or not believe in the sport you prefer?
6. holding neither of two opposing positions:
If you take an agnostic view of technology, then it becomes clear that your decisions to implement one solution or another should be driven by need.
Anonymous wrote:The people who respond seriously to this post are just as absurd as the OP.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Golf or hockey for girls.
Something like 70% of all college scholarships for golf go unclaimed. Of course, the amount of money you invest teaching your kid to play well could probably pay for tuition.
After looking it up, the only data I saw was that 200 out of 1800 women's golf scholarships went unused in 2009. Still amazing, but many don't include R&B and many are to lower-tier schools.
And as you said, it's an expensive sport to practice.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Golf or hockey for girls.
Something like 70% of all college scholarships for golf go unclaimed. Of course, the amount of money you invest teaching your kid to play well could probably pay for tuition.
Anonymous wrote:One of the big 3 doesn't have football, another is single- sex (something OP wasn't interested in). So choosing football, means hoping that's your son's ticket into Sidwell. Good luck with that!