Anonymous wrote:I am the PP who observed Norwood as more traditional in learning and GDS as more progressive. I have a follow-on question:
When we toured Norwood we saw abundant use of textbooks and formal curricula. When we toured GDS, it seemed like the teachers were inventing much more, not using pre-created worksheets, and so forth. I don't remember seeing a textbook being displayed the lower school at GDS at all.
Is that reflective of both schools' learning cultures and teaching approaches, or did the tours give us a false impression?
By the way, the GDS preschool teacher claimed to us that they never have PK students who enter able to read. That seems to directly contradict all the DCUM claims that they've got kids reading by the time they turn 4.
GDS LS uses math textbooks (Envision), even in first grade. I haven't seen them anywhere else for younger kids at least (for science, social studies). There are some worksheets in literacy, but mixed in with creative projects made up by the teachers. I wouldn't characterize the curricula as highly unusual, I would guess it is on par with other high quality privates. They shine in public speaking, social studies curricula integrated with field trips, the science instruction seems innovative.