Anonymous wrote:These are two very different schools. One is coeducational and the other is not. One has a religious affiliation in the other does not. And they are completely different areas.
It sounds like your child as confused as to what he wants.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Agreed
Commuting from DC to go to Potomac makes no sense
That completely depends where you are. Palisades? Just as easy to get to Potomac as St. Albans.
If you also work in dc then no the palisades doesn’t help.
I went to Potomac and we lived in Barnaby Woods and both my parents worked downtown. Bus picked me up half a block away. This was the 80s though.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. We're in DC.
Then StA with no doubts, unless you strenuously object to an Episcopal (light-touch religious) school or strenuously object to an all-boys school.
(Separately, in all honesty, commuting daily from DC to Potomac, even by bus, seems completely nuts to me. YMMV.)
Anonymous wrote:College admissions are really changing since the pandemic. If either of the schools still has APs, I'd go there. The schools will tell you their honors are better than APs and they very well may be, but the bottom line is in a test optional world, APs are a way to definitely show rigor to colleges. Some schools will say that honors kids can take AP tests to demonstrate rigor, but that requires outside study and nobody taking a bunch of honors has time for that.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. We're in DC.
Anonymous wrote:I would choose Saint Albans because it is a big three.
Anonymous wrote:Agreed
Commuting from DC to go to Potomac makes no sense
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:9th grade. Which would you choose?
Sporty boy and travel athlete but not headed to play in college. Loves science and math. Laid back and very well liked by peers. No financial aid but not wealthy and family lives a pretty simple lifestyle.
Which is closer to your home? That should be a huge factor.
Anonymous wrote:9th grade. Which would you choose?
Sporty boy and travel athlete but not headed to play in college. Loves science and math. Laid back and very well liked by peers. No financial aid but not wealthy and family lives a pretty simple lifestyle.