Anonymous wrote:Doing potluck for events that used to be catered.
Anonymous wrote:Brookewood
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Baltimore is…Baltimore. It certainly isn’t in its heyday at the moment. I don’t think schools in the DMV are in much danger.
Baltimore is part of “DMV”. Please tell me you know that.
Honestly, if you don’t know about “Baltimore privates”, you don’t seem qualified to weigh in on this discussion.
Anonymous wrote:Increasing enrollment of international (full pay) students. Not just a college thing.
Anonymous wrote:I’ve lived in the DMV my entire life and I’ve never heard of Baltimore being part of it. Ever.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:-A single-sex school starts admitting students of the opposite sex
I’m trying to come up with an example of a single-sex school in the area that switched to coed, and coming up with nothing other than the merger of St. Stephens with St. Agnes to make SSSAS back in the 1990s, which obviously changed both schools but the result is going strong. Has this happened anywhere else?
Anonymous wrote:An issue on the horizon for all private/independent schools in the DMV is the decline in fertility rates. There just aren't as many babies being born. Reduced numbers of students will stress some schools who need a set number of full pay families to break even.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Renting out space to another school (Green Acres.) I am not saying they are clodung BUT it is not a good sign.
Could be describe that in more detail? I’m pretty sure every school with a pool, for example, rents it out. Schools rent out field space in the summer for day camps. NCS & WIS rent out space for weddings.
Green Acres rented out a building to another school on a permanent basis.
We also felt like their facilities were not well-maintained.
I’m not saying they’re closing, but we didn’t get the impression that the school is well-run.
I think that private schools that don’t have high schools are more likely to struggle with alumni donations because if they finish at a school in 6th or 8th grade, there’s at least another decade before an alum is going to be in a position to donate much. By 23+ you’re too far removed from where you went to elementary school to care.
Norwood is doing quite well in donations.