Anonymous wrote:Also avoid Prep and St Albans
Anonymous wrote:Aussie family excited to soon move your way! We would love feedback/suggestions about school culture for boarding schools that fit the following:
1. Eastern US region
2. Must have a rowing program. (His absolute most favorite sport. Rugby is a distant second.)
3. And the single most important factor: Nice kids! Not excited about schools filled with billionaire alpha spawn who let you know the minute you walk in the door that the fix is in: They have it all sewn up, and you are there as window dressing to fill out the high school so they can hoover up all the awards and college placements.
I know 3 sounds rough, but it is what we were told by a few US families at our school here in Sydney. They are discouraging us. The culture is very different from the marketing is what we are told. Toxic is what they said, but I am keeping an open mind. However, our transfer might have us moving around, and we would like a consistent four year experience with solid relationships for our child.
We are not as hung up on the "perceived prestige" factor. I've read up on the acronyms and rankings. Interesting, but not persuasive. Great teaching and community for a bright kid is the goal.
Sooo....... what have you got for me? Thanks mate
Anonymous wrote:St. Andrews, Berkshire, and Northfield Mount Herman look interesting, for reference.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:St. Paul’s.
Agree.
St. Paul's School in Concord, New Hampshire. (Concord is the capitol of the state of New Hampshire.)
Outstanding rowing program. Incredible academics. But, there will be a lot of students from wealthy, but not showy,families.
St.Paul's School is 100% boarding and evenly divided between male and female students.
Anonymous wrote:Not sure if Mercersburg has a good rowing program but in terms of strong academics and a laid back atmosphere, it's a school to look at.
St. Andrews should be on your list. Just like what everyone else says.
Anonymous wrote:Deerfield mum of 2: Thank you for your insight. The same phenomenon is playing out at boarding schools here. The self segregation is real and impacts community. Our son’s city day/boarding school has just put a 2-yr circuit breaker pause on the pipeline while they create a strategy to address better integration. The school requires all Year 9 boys to live at their bush campus and it has a rigorous physical/outdoor ed/teambuilding curriculum for five months. This is where the mismatch was insanely apparent. My son will attend this and finish in June, then head to the US to start Year 9 from scratch (seasonal misalignment). Would love to find a cultural melting pot with real integration.
Wouldn’t all rowing be varsity? He would love a competitive program with enough kids who take it seriously that a few boats can race each other during practices. He’s just really into it and needs 7+ 1 other guys to make it happen. And we would love easy/on campus river access. Not excited about being bussed to the boatshed if it can be avoided.
I think Exeter sounds too big? Current school is 225 per Year. It’s working okay for him, but can feel a little too big. St. Andrew’s looks great but might be small? Definitely applying anyhow. Of the schools you mentioned, are any a bit more relaxed? He’s a very solid student with solid mental health to match. I feel protective of all kids’ mental health these days. I guess what I am looking for is high personal standards but not high collective pressure. To each his own with regards to how success is defined.
What questions do you suggest I ask to get a real sense of culture? On You Tube, they all make similar claims. No surprise. I would love to know what features of Deerfield you think are standout.
And they all have low admission rates. He might need to apply to multiple and the choice gets made for us? So casting a wide net.
Anonymous wrote:Taft is located right on a river do you can row right there, without traveling to a boathouse.
No school is going to be all nice kids. Because boarding is a relatively rare choice in the US, and extremely expensive, the families tend to be atypical in some way (affluence usually). Or unusual family situation/structure. But of course those kids can still be nice.