Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think wis is an excellent program but they can only afford 1 teacher per class in 2nd and up and I found that unacceptable for the price. It’s not like the classes are tiny either
Their support teachers just look different then what you are used to. They pull kids who struggle for 1:1 support to catch them up to their peers as quickly as possible. Just because there is only 1 teacher in the room, doesn't mean there is 1 teacher supporting the class and I'm not sure why another human body would need to stand there when students who need additional support are being given it in a private and direct setting.
They have lots of staff at the primary school with the job of providing push in & pull out interventions to students that need them. It's done on a student-by-student basis, rather than per class. That allows them to allocate special education resources where they would be most useful. Also keep in mind their SAL/FAL program effectively adds an extra teacher to the Spanish & French days for grades 2 and up, it's just a lot less visible because children who need the support receive it outside the classroom until they catch up. The net result averages more than 2 teachers per class, but done in a highly targeted way.
PS school at WIS was a NIAGHTMARE- 50% of students leave before 5 grade
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think wis is an excellent program but they can only afford 1 teacher per class in 2nd and up and I found that unacceptable for the price. It’s not like the classes are tiny either
Their support teachers just look different then what you are used to. They pull kids who struggle for 1:1 support to catch them up to their peers as quickly as possible. Just because there is only 1 teacher in the room, doesn't mean there is 1 teacher supporting the class and I'm not sure why another human body would need to stand there when students who need additional support are being given it in a private and direct setting.
They have lots of staff at the primary school with the job of providing push in & pull out interventions to students that need them. It's done on a student-by-student basis, rather than per class. That allows them to allocate special education resources where they would be most useful. Also keep in mind their SAL/FAL program effectively adds an extra teacher to the Spanish & French days for grades 2 and up, it's just a lot less visible because children who need the support receive it outside the classroom until they catch up. The net result averages more than 2 teachers per class, but done in a highly targeted way.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Never see WIS discussed but it appears to be just as competent at sending kids to the Ivies as STA/NCS, Sidwell, and GDS. So why do we pretend it doesn't exist?
there is no RIVAL
Based on the data provided, 39% of WIS students achieved grades of 6 or 7. If there were 62 students in total, this means approximately 24 students (62 x 0.39 = 24.18) received these top scores. This is less than 50% of the class for 2025 who received a high grade.
We're talking about college admissions here, not IB scores. (And, at any rate, the dual language IB is really very difficult. Students at most other area schools are not on a dual language IB track. So you're comparing apples & bananas, as the saying goes.)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Never see WIS discussed but it appears to be just as competent at sending kids to the Ivies as STA/NCS, Sidwell, and GDS. So why do we pretend it doesn't exist?
there is no RIVAL
Based on the data provided, 39% of WIS students achieved grades of 6 or 7. If there were 62 students in total, this means approximately 24 students (62 x 0.39 = 24.18) received these top scores. This is less than 50% of the class for 2025 who received a high grade.
We're talking about college admissions here, not IB scores. (And, at any rate, the dual language IB is really very difficult. Students at most other area schools are not on a dual language IB track. So you're comparing apples & bananas, as the saying goes.)
Are you saying low IB scores get WIS students into top colleges due to race or family connections? Does a low score actually equal a top-college acceptance?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Never see WIS discussed but it appears to be just as competent at sending kids to the Ivies as STA/NCS, Sidwell, and GDS. So why do we pretend it doesn't exist?
there is no RIVAL
Based on the data provided, 39% of WIS students achieved grades of 6 or 7. If there were 62 students in total, this means approximately 24 students (62 x 0.39 = 24.18) received these top scores. This is less than 50% of the class for 2025 who received a high grade.
We're talking about college admissions here, not IB scores. (And, at any rate, the dual language IB is really very difficult. Students at most other area schools are not on a dual language IB track. So you're comparing apples & bananas, as the saying goes.)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Never see WIS discussed but it appears to be just as competent at sending kids to the Ivies as STA/NCS, Sidwell, and GDS. So why do we pretend it doesn't exist?
there is no RIVAL
Based on the data provided, 39% of WIS students achieved grades of 6 or 7. If there were 62 students in total, this means approximately 24 students (62 x 0.39 = 24.18) received these top scores. This is less than 50% of the class for 2025 who received a high grade.
Anonymous wrote:Never see WIS discussed but it appears to be just as competent at sending kids to the Ivies as STA/NCS, Sidwell, and GDS. So why do we pretend it doesn't exist?
Anonymous wrote:Never see WIS discussed but it appears to be just as competent at sending kids to the Ivies as STA/NCS, Sidwell, and GDS. So why do we pretend it doesn't exist?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think wis is an excellent program but they can only afford 1 teacher per class in 2nd and up and I found that unacceptable for the price. It’s not like the classes are tiny either
Their support teachers just look different then what you are used to. They pull kids who struggle for 1:1 support to catch them up to their peers as quickly as possible. Just because there is only 1 teacher in the room, doesn't mean there is 1 teacher supporting the class and I'm not sure why another human body would need to stand there when students who need additional support are being given it in a private and direct setting.
Anonymous wrote:I think wis is an excellent program but they can only afford 1 teacher per class in 2nd and up and I found that unacceptable for the price. It’s not like the classes are tiny either
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Nobody cares about that school
Sorry that your kid was rejected.
1. We never even thought of that school, let alone applied.
2. Everyone gets into that school
3. Have you seen the facilities? LOL.
Interesting that someone who never even thought of that schools knows so well what the facilities look like. And yes, I have seen them and they compared well to other privates in the area, though their playground in the lower school could certainly be nicer. Their upper campus is beautiful.
It is outright wrong that everyone gets in. I know several full pay families, including with siblings attending, whose kids were rejected. One of those families had both their twins accepted to Beauvoir. The school looks for fit and the reality is that not every kid/family can handle the language immersion aspect.
WIS’ Upper School library is an absolute joke. I honestly thought our tour guide was kidding when she showed us the “library.” The theater and athletic facilities are also subpar. Overall, the campus is meh.
Sure, a very nice public library is practically across the street, so why would the school bother to recreate something the students can already access very easily from campus? Instead, the money was spent on amazing science labs, a design tech studio, etc.
If I’m paying $57,000+ per year, my children’s school library better be nice and on campus. A public library, down a steep hill and two blocks away is unacceptable. GDS, the Cathedral schools, and Sidwell all have access to a public library on Wisconsin Avenue, within a short distance from their campuses. However, none of those schools are trying to pass off a single room (that’s not even full of books), as a library.
WIS’ science labs do not make up for the rest of its mediocre campus.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Nobody cares about that school
Sorry that your kid was rejected.
1. We never even thought of that school, let alone applied.
2. Everyone gets into that school
3. Have you seen the facilities? LOL.
Interesting that someone who never even thought of that schools knows so well what the facilities look like. And yes, I have seen them and they compared well to other privates in the area, though their playground in the lower school could certainly be nicer. Their upper campus is beautiful.
It is outright wrong that everyone gets in. I know several full pay families, including with siblings attending, whose kids were rejected. One of those families had both their twins accepted to Beauvoir. The school looks for fit and the reality is that not every kid/family can handle the language immersion aspect.
WIS’ Upper School library is an absolute joke. I honestly thought our tour guide was kidding when she showed us the “library.” The theater and athletic facilities are also subpar. Overall, the campus is meh.
Sure, a very nice public library is practically across the street, so why would the school bother to recreate something the students can already access very easily from campus? Instead, the money was spent on amazing science labs, a design tech studio, etc.