Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They have females in the office, I just don't think there is a need.
WTF???
Anonymous wrote:They have females in the office, I just don't think there is a need.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Fwiw, I know several families who left the Heights in recent years due to concerns about academic rigor.
The ones I know were more concerned about the lack of STEM education, but there's something to be said for getting a rigorous education in learning to think rather than learning to code.
I agree with this - you can learn to code anywhere. Yes, the Heights is known for being VERY strong in the humanities, but probably not as strong in STEM.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I thought that too. It also basically shuts out kids who need some medical monitoring eg diabetes, cancer, food allergy
I agree with this. It might be an discrete or implicit way of excluding kids with medical issues without a dedicated nurse's office. Staff will not want to administer medication or controlled substances like ADHD medication.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Fwiw, I know several families who left the Heights in recent years due to concerns about academic rigor.
The ones I know were more concerned about the lack of STEM education, but there's something to be said for getting a rigorous education in learning to think rather than learning to code.
Anonymous wrote:My son goes to a different all boys school and they don't have a nurse. Never thought about it. A deal breaker? Odd.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Fwiw, I know several families who left the Heights in recent years due to concerns about academic rigor.
Yea... Being too rigorous.
No, quite the opposite.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Fwiw, I know several families who left the Heights in recent years due to concerns about academic rigor.
Yea... Being too rigorous.
Anonymous wrote:I thought that too. It also basically shuts out kids who need some medical monitoring eg diabetes, cancer, food allergy