Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:One of their students ended up being a Rhodes Scholar so....
Yup! Bullis has also had/has quite a few National Merit Scholars. Bullis has NEVER claimed to be an elite school in the D.C. area and we are proud of our diversity.
The people who send their kids to Bullis are sending them there for a well rounded school where their kids can thrive educationally, but also be supported where they are at. Those who send their kids to Bullis don’t want a pressure cooker and want their kids to have time to do the things kids do in their youth.
I am astonished at how often this school is criticized by those who do not have a rat in the race. It feels like they are putting Bullis down in order to feel better about their decision.
For us, Bullis was perfect. The “elite” schools were NOT a good fit for my neurodivergent kids and were never on our radar. Bullis supports them and they wake up happy to be at school everyday.
For 50K/year, I'd expect that school to be "elite".
What a limited view you have of the world you have.
Sorry...hit send too fast. What a limited view of the world you have. Some people, when they can afford it, will send their kids to a school where they can thrive and get the attention the need to succeed. Not everyone cares if their kid gets into an ivy. Some just want them to go the best school that they can for whatever it is they want to do. A school and education that makes my child happy and thrive is worth every single penny that I pay for it. We are not all elitists.
Great that you are happy there, but clearly the $50k/yr isn't producing high achieving students.
I don't care if my kid doesn't get into ivy, either, but it's ironic that you are spending as much as sending a kid to a private university, even though you don't care about ivy leagues.
But, I bet you do care if your kid goes to a B rated univ. after spending about $50k/yr in K-12.
And, btw, if you can spend $50k/yr just so that your child can be "happy", you are an elite.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:One of their students ended up being a Rhodes Scholar so....
Yup! Bullis has also had/has quite a few National Merit Scholars. Bullis has NEVER claimed to be an elite school in the D.C. area and we are proud of our diversity.
The people who send their kids to Bullis are sending them there for a well rounded school where their kids can thrive educationally, but also be supported where they are at. Those who send their kids to Bullis don’t want a pressure cooker and want their kids to have time to do the things kids do in their youth.
I am astonished at how often this school is criticized by those who do not have a rat in the race. It feels like they are putting Bullis down in order to feel better about their decision.
For us, Bullis was perfect. The “elite” schools were NOT a good fit for my neurodivergent kids and were never on our radar. Bullis supports them and they wake up happy to be at school everyday.
For 50K/year, I'd expect that school to be "elite".
What a limited view you have of the world you have.
Sorry...hit send too fast. What a limited view of the world you have. Some people, when they can afford it, will send their kids to a school where they can thrive and get the attention the need to succeed. Not everyone cares if their kid gets into an ivy. Some just want them to go the best school that they can for whatever it is they want to do. A school and education that makes my child happy and thrive is worth every single penny that I pay for it. We are not all elitists.
Great that you are happy there, but clearly the $50k/yr isn't producing high achieving students.
I don't care if my kid doesn't get into ivy, either, but it's ironic that you are spending as much as sending a kid to a private university, even though you don't care about ivy leagues.
But, I bet you do care if your kid goes to a B rated univ. after spending about $50k/yr in K-12.
And, btw, if you can spend $50k/yr just so that your child can be "happy", you are an elite.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:One of their students ended up being a Rhodes Scholar so....
Yup! Bullis has also had/has quite a few National Merit Scholars. Bullis has NEVER claimed to be an elite school in the D.C. area and we are proud of our diversity.
The people who send their kids to Bullis are sending them there for a well rounded school where their kids can thrive educationally, but also be supported where they are at. Those who send their kids to Bullis don’t want a pressure cooker and want their kids to have time to do the things kids do in their youth.
I am astonished at how often this school is criticized by those who do not have a rat in the race. It feels like they are putting Bullis down in order to feel better about their decision.
For us, Bullis was perfect. The “elite” schools were NOT a good fit for my neurodivergent kids and were never on our radar. Bullis supports them and they wake up happy to be at school everyday.
For 50K/year, I'd expect that school to be "elite".
What a limited view you have of the world you have.
Sorry...hit send too fast. What a limited view of the world you have. Some people, when they can afford it, will send their kids to a school where they can thrive and get the attention the need to succeed. Not everyone cares if their kid gets into an ivy. Some just want them to go the best school that they can for whatever it is they want to do. A school and education that makes my child happy and thrive is worth every single penny that I pay for it. We are not all elitists.
Great that you are happy there, but clearly the $50k/yr isn't producing high achieving students.
I don't care if my kid doesn't get into ivy, either, but it's ironic that you are spending as much as sending a kid to a private university, even though you don't care about ivy leagues.
But, I bet you do care if your kid goes to a B rated univ. after spending about $50k/yr in K-12.
And, btw, if you can spend $50k/yr just so that your child can be "happy", you are an elite.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:One of their students ended up being a Rhodes Scholar so....
Yup! Bullis has also had/has quite a few National Merit Scholars. Bullis has NEVER claimed to be an elite school in the D.C. area and we are proud of our diversity.
The people who send their kids to Bullis are sending them there for a well rounded school where their kids can thrive educationally, but also be supported where they are at. Those who send their kids to Bullis don’t want a pressure cooker and want their kids to have time to do the things kids do in their youth.
I am astonished at how often this school is criticized by those who do not have a rat in the race. It feels like they are putting Bullis down in order to feel better about their decision.
For us, Bullis was perfect. The “elite” schools were NOT a good fit for my neurodivergent kids and were never on our radar. Bullis supports them and they wake up happy to be at school everyday.
For 50K/year, I'd expect that school to be "elite".
What a limited view you have of the world you have.
Sorry...hit send too fast. What a limited view of the world you have. Some people, when they can afford it, will send their kids to a school where they can thrive and get the attention the need to succeed. Not everyone cares if their kid gets into an ivy. Some just want them to go the best school that they can for whatever it is they want to do. A school and education that makes my child happy and thrive is worth every single penny that I pay for it. We are not all elitists.
Anonymous wrote:https://s3.documentcloud.org/documents/21062736/marylandnationalmeritsemifinalists22.pdf
None from Bullis.
While this list may not speak to the teaching at the school, the fact that Bullis (vs Sidwell, Maret, etc) is never represented speaks to the fact that it is not a school that has a high percentage of high performing kids - and that is what the OP was asking about.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:One of their students ended up being a Rhodes Scholar so....
Yup! Bullis has also had/has quite a few National Merit Scholars. Bullis has NEVER claimed to be an elite school in the D.C. area and we are proud of our diversity.
The people who send their kids to Bullis are sending them there for a well rounded school where their kids can thrive educationally, but also be supported where they are at. Those who send their kids to Bullis don’t want a pressure cooker and want their kids to have time to do the things kids do in their youth.
I am astonished at how often this school is criticized by those who do not have a rat in the race. It feels like they are putting Bullis down in order to feel better about their decision.
For us, Bullis was perfect. The “elite” schools were NOT a good fit for my neurodivergent kids and were never on our radar. Bullis supports them and they wake up happy to be at school everyday.
For 50K/year, I'd expect that school to be "elite".
What a limited view you have of the world you have.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:One of their students ended up being a Rhodes Scholar so....
Yup! Bullis has also had/has quite a few National Merit Scholars. Bullis has NEVER claimed to be an elite school in the D.C. area and we are proud of our diversity.
The people who send their kids to Bullis are sending them there for a well rounded school where their kids can thrive educationally, but also be supported where they are at. Those who send their kids to Bullis don’t want a pressure cooker and want their kids to have time to do the things kids do in their youth.
I am astonished at how often this school is criticized by those who do not have a rat in the race. It feels like they are putting Bullis down in order to feel better about their decision.
For us, Bullis was perfect. The “elite” schools were NOT a good fit for my neurodivergent kids and were never on our radar. Bullis supports them and they wake up happy to be at school everyday.
For 50K/year, I'd expect that school to be "elite".
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:One of their students ended up being a Rhodes Scholar so....
One lol
How many semi and national merit finalists do they have every year? When this has been published Bullis nearly always has zero. None.
FYI...Last year they had 2 national merit finalists and one presidential scholar semi-finalist.
given how pricey that place is I'd expect more.
I guess if you equate price to solely student academic awards.
I expect bang for my buck and would expect higher quality education for that amount of money. Usually, higher quality education leads to a higher percentage of students getting into top schools and getting academic awards. So yes, I do equate price with student academic achievement (awards).
Let’s be honest here. Even at the top schools there are not a lot of award winners on a relative basis. My DC is actually on the academically elite end (not bragging before the bombs are thrown- just that this is the main interest, not athletics or arts) and is thriving at Bullis. It’s not a pressure cooker and for me that is a good thing. Still learning a lot and taking advantage of the amazing resources offered by the school and getting a very well rounded experience.