Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have met HA alums who claim their high school experience consisted of late nights, burnout, and depression due to the "pressure cooker" nature of the school. I have also heard from current/past students and their families who say that the workload, content, etc is incredibly manageable and have plenty of free time outside of academics. Does anyone know why this is? Or what type of girls will have an easier time?
The students who have balanced lives are the ones that use their time wisely. If they can knock out 2~3 classes worth of homework in school by using study halls and time before or after sports, the evenings are more than manageable.
Teens procrastinate by and large but efficiency is key. I don’t think this is exclusive to Holton; I think every well rounded student is time efficient. Having the extra time then allows extracurriculars, sports, jobs, fun with with friends. Every one of my dd friends that is (relatively) happy and had great college application results is like this.
Anonymous wrote:I went to a peer school and graduated a while ago. Working hard in HS is not a bad thing. I was an average HS school, went to a top 30 University (towards the bottom of the list) and had the best time in college b/c it was so easy compared to HS.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The toughest thing about Holton is the mean girls and the families they come from. Sharks in the water just waiting for you.
You mean NCS?
Anonymous wrote:The toughest thing about Holton is the mean girls and the families they come from. Sharks in the water just waiting for you.
Anonymous wrote:Some students are striving for top grades and are stressed. Other stdents are less motivated and are not. It depends on the DC (and maybe family pressure on DC). This is true at many many schools.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I did not go there and neither did my children.
The only thing I can discuss are women that I know IRL who went there - outside counsel, friends, colleagues. None of them are super successful. Just regular worker bees.
How old are you? Mine went there and is a millionaire (age 29). She is brilliant. Many of her classmates were brilliant too. In fact, when my dd started there in middle school, and I met some of the girls. I was amazed by the impressive work they did.
How gauche to come online and brag about your child’s earnings.
If it were a man's earnings, you would have no issue with it. You are mired in your patriarchical misogony.
NP: I think it is in bad taste either way. extremely financially successful would suffice for the description of your child of any gender, if you feel the need to share.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I did not go there and neither did my children.
The only thing I can discuss are women that I know IRL who went there - outside counsel, friends, colleagues. None of them are super successful. Just regular worker bees.
How old are they? Holton used to be a pretty unimpressive, not very rigorous school for righ girls who couldn’t get into harder schools like Sidwell or ncs. Or didn’t want to work hard enough to go there. Supposedly it has gotten harder.
Anonymous wrote:The toughest thing about Holton is the mean girls and the families they come from. Sharks in the water just waiting for you.