Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:NP. I’d heard more liberal families are leaving. A parent complained about there being too many rainbow stickers and voila, a bunch were taken down. The dress code is obviously super conservative. And they recently had an 8th grade seminar discussion about Jan 6th and approached it as if there are “two sides” with equally valid perspectives.
To each their own… As an MS parent, I would not describe the dress code as “super conservative.” I’m fine with it. And having had some experience in public middle school in Alexandria and seeing what kids wear there, I am even more OK with the Saints dress code.
What??
NO about Jan 6th
That was a coup against the US government there are not two sides.
Any school teaching that is absolute garbage!
The 8th grade seminar is student led discussion. If there was any discussion about there being two sides on January 6th, it was brought in by a student who likely heard that at home. 95% of the teachers at SSSAS virtue signal very liberal. No teacher would “teach” that there were two rational sides to January 6th.
what would they teach about the attacks on ICE agents in Minnesota and elsewhere?
Anonymous wrote:New poster here. I'm curious about the religious aspects at the school. As someone from another faith background would my child feel uncomfortable? Do they make the children go to church during the day?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:NP. I’d heard more liberal families are leaving. A parent complained about there being too many rainbow stickers and voila, a bunch were taken down. The dress code is obviously super conservative. And they recently had an 8th grade seminar discussion about Jan 6th and approached it as if there are “two sides” with equally valid perspectives.
To each their own… As an MS parent, I would not describe the dress code as “super conservative.” I’m fine with it. And having had some experience in public middle school in Alexandria and seeing what kids wear there, I am even more OK with the Saints dress code.
What??
NO about Jan 6th
That was a coup against the US government there are not two sides.
Any school teaching that is absolute garbage!
The 8th grade seminar is student led discussion. If there was any discussion about there being two sides on January 6th, it was brought in by a student who likely heard that at home. 95% of the teachers at SSSAS virtue signal very liberal. No teacher would “teach” that there were two rational sides to January 6th.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes, we were at the robotics tournament, too. VERY impressed with the SSSAS kids AND teachers. They seem to have close relationships and mutual respect- really impressed!
Sorry but this is absolutely normal at every school that does robotics. Also, if you have a kid who is really interested in robotics, look for a school that does VEX, not First robotics. Most privates do vex. First allows for giant teams so most are public school and most only give kids a taste of one aspect of robotics bc there are just too many kids on each team. Vex forces everyone to learn every aspect. If you do end up as SSSAS and are into robotics, consider joining a vex team outside of school. You can look at robotevents.com to see which clubs are highly ranked and apply to join one of them.
Anonymous wrote:That is not an irrational fear. Lots of elitism in DC privates and certain public elementary schools. Lifers don’t get it though because it’s all they know.Anonymous wrote:hi all - we are considering SSSAS for our children.
I am wondering if anyone can speak to the culture at the school. What it's like for families and students in general.
This is not specific to SSSAS, but I am generally concerned about uber rich or elitist vibes at private schools and don't know if that is based in reality or an irrational fear.
That is not an irrational fear. Lots of elitism in DC privates and certain public elementary schools. Lifers don’t get it though because it’s all they know.Anonymous wrote:hi all - we are considering SSSAS for our children.
I am wondering if anyone can speak to the culture at the school. What it's like for families and students in general.
This is not specific to SSSAS, but I am generally concerned about uber rich or elitist vibes at private schools and don't know if that is based in reality or an irrational fear.
Anonymous wrote:Yes, we were at the robotics tournament, too. VERY impressed with the SSSAS kids AND teachers. They seem to have close relationships and mutual respect- really impressed!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:NP. I’d heard more liberal families are leaving. A parent complained about there being too many rainbow stickers and voila, a bunch were taken down. The dress code is obviously super conservative. And they recently had an 8th grade seminar discussion about Jan 6th and approached it as if there are “two sides” with equally valid perspectives.
To each their own… As an MS parent, I would not describe the dress code as “super conservative.” I’m fine with it. And having had some experience in public middle school in Alexandria and seeing what kids wear there, I am even more OK with the Saints dress code.
What??
NO about Jan 6th
That was a coup against the US government there are not two sides.
Any school teaching that is absolute garbage!