Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We had a 9th grader last year get into each of the Big Three - Sidwell, GDS and NCS/St. Albans. During the accepted students day, we ran into a few kids (and their parents) multiple times as they had also been accepted at more than one Big 3 school. I have no idea what percentage of the total applicant population they (and we) represented.
Wow, what an obnoxious conversation to have!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:When you get accepted at both schools your child will be able to revisit the schools to determine which is best for them.
Highly doubt that this is actually possible. Sounds like OP is coming from another private, in which case they'd likely be declaring a first choice before decisions are made so that their current school's outplacement team can lobby hard for that choice accordingly, essentially conceding admission to the second choice. My sense is that the ability to choose between Sidwell and GDS after having been admitted to both is a near-mythical situation that very few applicants likely enjoy in any given year.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:When you get accepted at both schools your child will be able to revisit the schools to determine which is best for them.
Highly doubt that this is actually possible. Sounds like OP is coming from another private, in which case they'd likely be declaring a first choice before decisions are made so that their current school's outplacement team can lobby hard for that choice accordingly, essentially conceding admission to the second choice. My sense is that the ability to choose between Sidwell and GDS after having been admitted to both is a near-mythical situation that very few applicants likely enjoy in any given year.
Admitted to and chose b/t Blair, GDS, SFS, and STA. Went with SFS after going to all admit events and shadow days.
Little brother only applied to SFS and GDS, went with SFS.
What factors made them choose SFS?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:When you get accepted at both schools your child will be able to revisit the schools to determine which is best for them.
Highly doubt that this is actually possible. Sounds like OP is coming from another private, in which case they'd likely be declaring a first choice before decisions are made so that their current school's outplacement team can lobby hard for that choice accordingly, essentially conceding admission to the second choice. My sense is that the ability to choose between Sidwell and GDS after having been admitted to both is a near-mythical situation that very few applicants likely enjoy in any given year.
Admitted to and chose b/t Blair, GDS, SFS, and STA. Went with SFS after going to all admit events and shadow days.
Little brother only applied to SFS and GDS, went with SFS.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We had a 9th grader last year get into each of the Big Three - Sidwell, GDS and NCS/St. Albans. During the accepted students day, we ran into a few kids (and their parents) multiple times as they had also been accepted at more than one Big 3 school. I have no idea what percentage of the total applicant population they (and we) represented.
Wow, what an obnoxious conversation to have!
+1. I can't imagine behaving this way at an open house. I really can't.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How many students do you think are actually admitted to more than one of Sidwell/GDS/NCS/STA in any given year?
all of them?
Anonymous wrote:How many students do you think are actually admitted to more than one of Sidwell/GDS/NCS/STA in any given year?
Anonymous wrote:The primary parent relationships are with the school and teachers, not the other parents. It's high school, so as far as our kids are concerned, the less we show up and interact with their friends' parents the better. Other than the parents we knew already, we made no effort to know other parents besides DC's BFF. I know a fair number of parents from work and it is a little weird when you have a professional relationship with the parents and the kids don't like each other.
Anonymous wrote:Assume most parents would be a-holes, typical of the NWDC/Bethesda/McLean high earner crowds. Certainly what I saw of the lower school parents.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Generally, except for as invented on DCUM, people don't go around at open houses asking where other children have been admitted, with particular emphasis on the "Big 3."
That's not what the PP said happened. They ran into some people repeatedly and recognized them. Still don't see how this is bad form.