Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I can't speak about later grades or real academics, but My child is in PK3 and it's been amazing. DC's teachers are incredible- so patient, comforting, and amazing at what they do. I have a friend with a child in 4th and she is equally pleased with the school and teachers.
The security, on the other hand, leaves a lot of room for discomfort.
The OP is asking about SWW, not Francis-Stevens at SWW. These are completely different schools despite the "merger."
OP literally did not specify that, at all. Asshole.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I can't speak about later grades or real academics, but My child is in PK3 and it's been amazing. DC's teachers are incredible- so patient, comforting, and amazing at what they do. I have a friend with a child in 4th and she is equally pleased with the school and teachers.
The security, on the other hand, leaves a lot of room for discomfort.
The OP is asking about SWW, not Francis-Stevens at SWW. These are completely different schools despite the "merger."
OP literally did not specify that, at all. Asshole.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I can't speak about later grades or real academics, but My child is in PK3 and it's been amazing. DC's teachers are incredible- so patient, comforting, and amazing at what they do. I have a friend with a child in 4th and she is equally pleased with the school and teachers.
The security, on the other hand, leaves a lot of room for discomfort.
The OP is asking about SWW, not Francis-Stevens at SWW. These are completely different schools despite the "merger."
OP literally did not specify that, at all. Asshole.
Anonymous wrote:uAnonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Parent of a middle school student here. I think Walls now offers what the parents of high-achieving students have demanded over the course of their child’s education.
Classmates who all perform well on standardized tests, and a learning experience validated by high test standardized scores, AP, SAT et al. And the opportunity to work ahead to hone competitive advantage: students can actually earn an associate’s degree starting junior year, right?
What’s not to love?
Hmm, I don't think I love sequestering high achieving students together. Sounds like a pressure cooker, and not the real world either, not to mention lack of diversity and children of all kinds of intelligence (not only narrow academic ability). I really benefited from this variety in my own high school, which was more like a Wilson. I probably won't be looking at SWW for my kid.
Hmmm. This poster sounds like the parent of a younger-than-middle-school child. Get back with me after you first year in a non-Deal DCPS middle school and tell me how that variety is working out for your hopefully at least at grade level child.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I can't speak about later grades or real academics, but My child is in PK3 and it's been amazing. DC's teachers are incredible- so patient, comforting, and amazing at what they do. I have a friend with a child in 4th and she is equally pleased with the school and teachers.
The security, on the other hand, leaves a lot of room for discomfort.
The OP is asking about SWW, not Francis-Stevens at SWW. These are completely different schools despite the "merger."
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Parent of a middle school student here. I think Walls now offers what the parents of high-achieving students have demanded over the course of their child’s education.
Classmates who all perform well on standardized tests, and a learning experience validated by high test standardized scores, AP, SAT et al. And the opportunity to work ahead to hone competitive advantage: students can actually earn an associate’s degree starting junior year, right?
What’s not to love?
Hmm, I don't think I love sequestering high achieving students together. Sounds like a pressure cooker, and not the real world either, not to mention lack of diversity and children of all kinds of intelligence (not only narrow academic ability). I really benefited from this variety in my own high school, which was more like a Wilson. I probably won't be looking at SWW for my kid.
uAnonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Parent of a middle school student here. I think Walls now offers what the parents of high-achieving students have demanded over the course of their child’s education.
Classmates who all perform well on standardized tests, and a learning experience validated by high test standardized scores, AP, SAT et al. And the opportunity to work ahead to hone competitive advantage: students can actually earn an associate’s degree starting junior year, right?
What’s not to love?
Hmm, I don't think I love sequestering high achieving students together. Sounds like a pressure cooker, and not the real world either, not to mention lack of diversity and children of all kinds of intelligence (not only narrow academic ability). I really benefited from this variety in my own high school, which was more like a Wilson. I probably won't be looking at SWW for my kid.
Anonymous wrote:Parent of a middle school student here. I think Walls now offers what the parents of high-achieving students have demanded over the course of their child’s education.
Classmates who all perform well on standardized tests, and a learning experience validated by high test standardized scores, AP, SAT et al. And the opportunity to work ahead to hone competitive advantage: students can actually earn an associate’s degree starting junior year, right?
What’s not to love?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Parent of a middle school student here. I think Walls now offers what the parents of high-achieving students have demanded over the course of their child’s education.
Classmates who all perform well on standardized tests, and a learning experience validated by high test standardized scores, AP, SAT et al. And the opportunity to work ahead to hone competitive advantage: students can actually earn an associate’s degree starting junior year, right?
What’s not to love?
Not all students can earn an associates degree - the program is limited to a few students each year. and unless you choose GWU for college, most selective colleges and universities will limit the amount of college credit given for work complete during in high school, especially work for which you received credit toward your diploma.
The education at SWW doesn’t live up to its billing. It is fine but nothing particularly special.
Anonymous wrote:Walls is do far from its original mission - experiential education - it is ridiculous.
Honestly I think it should be merged with another school (Banneker?) under joint management (keep the bldg) or just reconstituted entirely.
What is the point of a selective “humanities” school that offers no post-AP humanities classes? Does every course have students leave the bldg every week and use the city as their name reflects?
Why don’t people demand more?
Anonymous wrote:Parent of a middle school student here. I think Walls now offers what the parents of high-achieving students have demanded over the course of their child’s education.
Classmates who all perform well on standardized tests, and a learning experience validated by high test standardized scores, AP, SAT et al. And the opportunity to work ahead to hone competitive advantage: students can actually earn an associate’s degree starting junior year, right?
What’s not to love?