Anonymous wrote:I thought NCS girls had frequent interaction with STA boys? Do they never see each other in any academic or extracurricular environment?
Anonymous wrote:Can you imagine if interaction with high school teens was actually a useful tool for future jobs and relationships? Yikes! It really is OK to skip this chapter of most people's development. In the workplace, many people will pretend they never had those awkward teenage years, or are in therapy trying to undo the damage.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This thread is a trip. This board goes from “what preschool should Layla go to so she can go to a Big 3 school so she can go to an Ivy” (girls can do anything and mine is going to take over the world!) to “DD is AT a Big 3, and she’s pretty, sporty and fun, but wow would she be better with a boyfriend.”
How very progressive!
Do better mamas.
Not OP, but have a daughter in a girls school, and it’s not just about having a boyfriend, it’s about having virtually no interaction with boys so not learning normal social skills with them. There is a different vibe when boys are in the classroom or are coworkers—that my daughter is not being prepared for that at all is my concern. My daughter’s school does have a brother school who they’ve had events with only 3 times in the past two years.
To the poster with a daughter new to a girls school, yes to getting a co-Ed summer job. Madeira has co-Ed summer camps and a co-Ed CIT and counselor program, but you need to sign up early (March).
Anonymous wrote:I went to NCS, albeit more than twenty years ago.
I really didn’t intermingle much with boys in middle school at all other than during a couple plays.
In high school, I met boys through government club, drama, glee club, and orchestra.
Sta boys are….not the best IMO. I think the all boys environment brews sexism.
I did have a nice boyfriend for my last year or so of high school, an sta guy. In retrospect I don’t even know if that was a good thing because it distracted me from focusing on my friends and my schoolwork. So if it does not happen that’s fine.
In my day, the group you refer to that does know boys tend to go to Beauvoir and often went to Schippens dancing school or at least wooey and sometimes know each other from country club. I don’t know if that dynamic still exists. But I wouldn’t want my daughter to be in that group. Not to slut shame, but they tended to party more and I don’t think the sexual experiences they had were always consensual or positive.
I agree with the dad above not to stress about it. Teenage boys can kinda suck anyway. I think dating in high school is overrated.
Teenage boys can "kinda suck"? As opposed to teenage girls? Hilarious![]()
I did do some coed summer programs and I think that was good for social development. I also went to a coed college.
Anonymous wrote:This thread is a trip. This board goes from “what preschool should Layla go to so she can go to a Big 3 school so she can go to an Ivy” (girls can do anything and mine is going to take over the world!) to “DD is AT a Big 3, and she’s pretty, sporty and fun, but wow would she be better with a boyfriend.”
How very progressive!
Do better mamas.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For those who are worried about limited male interactions. I posted above about my girls having little contact with boys through the Covid year, but when they did interact with boys through sports it was not like there were any issues to overcome from the previous lack of interaction.
It all seems to happen pretty naturally when kids are given the chance to spend some time together so if your daughter has not had this opportunity yet I am not sure it is going to be any kind of problem.
I did noticed that there was more interaction in Junior year. Sports are good though as the interaction is repeated so they may not speak to each other at first but eventually they all become friends.
I do not understand what you are saying. How is having contact during a sport the same as social interaction with the opposite sex. I doubt the boys and girls are on the same team. Sports teams are very controlled. You do not just stop playing/practicing and go to and hangout with someone because you want to.
Anonymous wrote:So what do we collectively think about Wellesley or Smith?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Young men of quality are still taught to date.
We’ve found the best pair ups came from our country club.
Did they take their dates to the sock hop in their thunderbird?