Anonymous wrote:We loved Landon. Great experience, the boy's are really sweet --and I'm not being facetious. I'm sure they're are a few outliers, but I didn't meet or see them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Landon has a toxic masculinity
False again. Jim Neill isn’t having any of that. Believe me, I have done my homework — quite a bit of homework. DS is entering 9th grade. So incredibly excited. The atmosphere is not toxic. Go Bears.
This is absolutely correct. And the new 9th grade is great. Know a ton of them. All nice.
Glad to read this: We have a new Bear starting in 9th as well! And, toxic is the last word that I would use to describe the Bears that I know, both past and present. The vast majority are truly good guys.
Anonymous wrote:I like Landon but the school is way overprice for what you get ( academics and sports)
I do not see any thing that justified 43K a year tuition
I like Landon but the school is way overprice for what you get ( academics and sports)
I do not see any thing that justified 43K a year tuition
All of these schools are in the 42-47k range. It is, what it is.
Anonymous wrote:I like Landon but the school is way overprice for what you get ( academics and sports)
I do not see any thing that justified 43K a year tuition
Anonymous wrote:I like Landon but the school is way overprice for what you get ( academics and sports)
I do not see any thing that justified 43K a year tuition
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Landon parent here. Most people who have kids at Landon love the school. Many who have kids at Landon and Holton wish Holton were a bit more like Landon. The school is warm and every boy ends his career the best of himself. The past few years I have heard many a friend with kids at schools that everyone on DCUM (or most) covet and many of these same parents are stressed for their kids. Stressed about bullying, stressed about work load and stressed about college placement. Landon seems to avoid this stuff. I cannot tell you about what went on this school years ago but now it is a terrific place. At the end of the day if your son is happy and well prepared for college and gets in a college he is happy about then all is okay in the world.
Thank you, poster!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Only 5 Ivies in a class of 80? Whitman did better. Not great for an alleged top private.
This is an asinine comment. We have no idea in such a scenario of the quality of the class, the potential of legacy parents at either of the high schools, and other such variables. Who cares whether ivy or not? The college list has perfectly acceptable colleges, the kids will be happy and they received a good high school education. Move along.
I have to say, I am amazed at the fascination on DCUM with ivy league schools. What if at some high school there are 25 legacy parents and they help their kids get in. How does that show up in the stats or opinions of the high school? On average, almost 35% of legacies to ivies are admitted, compared to 8%-10% of non-legacy applicants. So juding a high school by its ivy students may really just be checking how many parents went to those colleges.
This is why the private schools in DC to me don't seem very impressive. They are loaded with legacies so, if anything, you'd expect a lot more of their students to get into elite colleges. Some of these admission lists people are bragging about here aren't that different from ones at public schools.
This is so true. I was looking at another school''s 2019 list and only 1/ 7 admitted to three very top colleges was not from rich legacy donor family or for sports. .
This makes schools like Thomas Jefferson seem all the more impressive. Doubt there's many big donors there or legacies or kids playing silly sports like fencing or lacrosse or the panoply of other dumb "hooks" private school families rely on.
We usually rely on our good looks, wealth, and proper education. Good luck to your MCPS grad when they face final exams for the first time.