Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I agree that GDS has lost its way. They've lost sight of core values as they've pushed for all those Harvard acceptances. The school will recover, but they need to see the problems and not sweep them under the rug. And favoritism has to end!
It will be a challenge to focus on the school educational and management issues when the school leadership and board are all fixated on the "The Art of the Deal", trying to become big time real estate developers.
The Donald with a fig leaf of "social justice" tradition.
Anonymous wrote:Spin is all the GDS administration can do these days. So when they lose control of the discussion, that's a crisis from their POV. That's a depressing phenomenon in a school that prides itself on having difficult but important conversations and on teaching its students to think critically. The kids actually rose to the challenge; the adults let them down.
Anonymous wrote:GDS hasn't lost its mojo, it's just sidetracked. The school is still a strong academic institution. From outside, it seems like there is a leadership issue. The decision to go into real estate has not been smooth so far but real estate deals and approvals never are. The racial issues, from what I hear, second hand, seem to be amplified by a couple of bad decisions that failed to put limits and guardrails around the public discussion.
Anonymous wrote:GDS hasn't lost its mojo, it's just sidetracked. The school is still a strong academic institution. From outside, it seems like there is a leadership issue. The decision to go into real estate has not been smooth so far but real estate deals and approvals never are. The racial issues, from what I hear, second hand, seem to be amplified by a couple of bad decisions that failed to put limits and guardrails around the public discussion.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How recently did your kid graduate? I would have agreed with you 10 years ago re GDS's relationship with/rhetoric re Sidwell, but things have changed since then.
What about the refrain that the Obamas didn't really choose Sidwell over GDS? That they really wanted GDS as a first choice/Michelle loved her GDS visit/just so impressed with GDS social justice history/Eric Holder recommended GDS, etc., etc., ... but the Secret Service threw up security concerns about traffic at the Macarthur campus and so in the end the Obamas reluctantly followed the Clintons' path to Sidwell.![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sure, you wouldn't hear it in those contexts (or from teachers). Fundraising, campus consolidation, HS course offerings, discipline, extra-curriculars, and admissions are the contexts in which I've heard parents and administrators bring Sidwell up.
Doesn't GDS usually beat Sidwell in admissions to Harvard and the other Top Ivies?
Anonymous wrote:How recently did your kid graduate? I would have agreed with you 10 years ago re GDS's relationship with/rhetoric re Sidwell, but things have changed since then.
Anonymous wrote:Sure, you wouldn't hear it in those contexts (or from teachers). Fundraising, campus consolidation, HS course offerings, discipline, extra-curriculars, and admissions are the contexts in which I've heard parents and administrators bring Sidwell up.
Anonymous wrote:How recently did your kid graduate? I would have agreed with you 10 years ago re GDS's relationship with/rhetoric re Sidwell, but things have changed since then.
Anonymous wrote:How recently did your kid graduate? I would have agreed with you 10 years ago re GDS's relationship with/rhetoric re Sidwell, but things have changed since then.