Anonymous wrote:This is Peggy Otey, Head of School at Browne Academy, and I wanted to reach out on this thread. I am proud of our school’s program, teachers, and our families’ commitment to the core values of Excellence, Diversity, Character, and Community. No school is the perfect fit for every single child, and the greater community is fortunate to have so many wonderful schools in this area from which to choose. At our school, we teach our students that sources must be current, credible, and correct and never to accept “anonymous” as a valid source. I encourage current families to talk directly with me when they have questions or concerns, and I invite any prospective family to visit our campus and gain first-hand knowledge of Browne so that they are able to make an informed decision about what is best for their child and family. I have tremendous respect for Burgundy Farm Country Day’s head of school, and I am certain he would also welcome you to his campus. I am delighted to answer any questions you may have. Please email me at potey@browneacademy.org or call 703-960-3000.
Anonymous wrote:
I would say that ACDs is alot more progressive than you think. It is smack at a crossroads of traditional and progressive. IMHO, the best of both worlds. It is NOT more traditional than Browne.
- signed, a current ACDS parent who looked at all 3 schools.
Anonymous wrote:OP here, thanking everyone for their feedback.
We're interested in a small class size for the individual attention from the teachers, not out of hopes that it will help our kid overcome his shyness. He's interested because he's been in very small classes from the beginning, by accident rather than by design (we live in a small-school place), and he was gobsmacked when he heard how big some of the DC area schools are. I'm sure he'll be a DC metro pro in no time, but we're seeking to ease the transition for him as much as we can.
I'd read that Browne was somewhere in the middle between traditional ACDS and progressive Burgundy, so I started to think of Browne as on the progressive side. Guess not.![]()
Anonymous wrote:OP here, thanking everyone for their feedback.
We're interested in a small class size for the individual attention from the teachers, not out of hopes that it will help our kid overcome his shyness. He's interested because he's been in very small classes from the beginning, by accident rather than by design (we live in a small-school place), and he was gobsmacked when he heard how big some of the DC area schools are. I'm sure he'll be a DC metro pro in no time, but we're seeking to ease the transition for him as much as we can.
I'd read that Browne was somewhere in the middle between traditional ACDS and progressive Burgundy, so I started to think of Browne as on the progressive side. Guess not.![]()
I would say that ACDs is alot more progressive than you think. It is smack at a crossroads of traditional and progressive. IMHO, the best of both worlds. It is NOT more traditional than Browne.
- signed, a current ACDS parent who looked at all 3 schools.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Honestly, as a former Burgundy parent, I had the option to go Browne and choose Burgundy. I regretted it after the fact. Just very different schools and while I though I wanted Burgundy, I didn't really like the combined grades, amongst other things.
The OP is looking at middle school, so the 2/3 and 4/5 combined classes in Burgundy’s lower school is irrelevant.
Anonymous wrote:Honestly, as a former Burgundy parent, I had the option to go Browne and choose Burgundy. I regretted it after the fact. Just very different schools and while I though I wanted Burgundy, I didn't really like the combined grades, amongst other things.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What high school is most like Burgundy?
More Burgundy students go to TC Williams than any other because they are Alexandria City residents and there is a bias among Burgundy parents to be part of the public school system. Every 3-4 years, the TC valedictorian or salutatorian is a Burgundy grad. For average Burgundy students, Field and Burke would be similar independent schools. For strong students, it would be GDS. GDS has been the most popular high school to apply at Burgundy, but enrollment (don't know how many acceptances) has been pretty much limited to 1 or 2 students while SFS and StA/NCS are typically 0-1 students.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What high school is most like Burgundy?
More Burgundy students go to TC Williams than any other because they are Alexandria City residents and there is a bias among Burgundy parents to be part of the public school system. Every 3-4 years, the TC valedictorian or salutatorian is a Burgundy grad. For average Burgundy students, Field and Burke would be similar independent schools. For strong students, it would be GDS. GDS has been the most popular high school to apply at Burgundy, but enrollment (don't know how many acceptances) has been pretty much limited to 1 or 2 students while SFS and StA/NCS are typically 0-1 students.
Anonymous wrote:What high school is most like Burgundy?