Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:we are a former Langley family with many friends still at the school and I agree with PP.
Their outplacement this year was not the best.
Zero accepted at Sidwell , 1 accepted at GDS. I am not sure about other “Big 5s” but seems like the same few kids who got into several of the top schools
to be fair the 8th grade class is one of the smallest at Langley so hard to compare when saying it is a small few. the list above with school school names by a prior poster is correct there was more than one to GDS, maret, cathedral schools etc. several applied to field and got in. yes there are a few on waiting lists as well
I’m a parent familiar with this grade and it’s always been an outlier class. Small, a lot of kids with behavioral issues. Not sure what was in the water that year. The current 7th grade is a really nice group I expect that Langley will do well with outplacement next year.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:we are a former Langley family with many friends still at the school and I agree with PP.
Their outplacement this year was not the best.
Zero accepted at Sidwell , 1 accepted at GDS. I am not sure about other “Big 5s” but seems like the same few kids who got into several of the top schools
to be fair the 8th grade class is one of the smallest at Langley so hard to compare when saying it is a small few. the list above with school school names by a prior poster is correct there was more than one to GDS, maret, cathedral schools etc. several applied to field and got in. yes there are a few on waiting lists as well
I’m a parent familiar with this grade and it’s always been an outlier class. Small, a lot of kids with behavioral issues. Not sure what was in the water that year. The current 7th grade is a really nice group I expect that Langley will do well with outplacement next year.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Its always going to be the rich and connected that get into the "Big 3" anyway, so no surprise. Being neither of those, we focused on other schools.
Not really. Mostly the kids from our K-8 who got into 9th grade were top athletes or URMs
We are not rich or connected, not an athlete, not URM, not an alum or sibling and our child got into a Big 3 school from a K8 this year. It does happen.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Its always going to be the rich and connected that get into the "Big 3" anyway, so no surprise. Being neither of those, we focused on other schools.
Not really. Mostly the kids from our K-8 who got into 9th grade were top athletes or URMs
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:we are a former Langley family with many friends still at the school and I agree with PP.
Their outplacement this year was not the best.
Zero accepted at Sidwell , 1 accepted at GDS. I am not sure about other “Big 5s” but seems like the same few kids who got into several of the top schools
to be fair the 8th grade class is one of the smallest at Langley so hard to compare when saying it is a small few. the list above with school school names by a prior poster is correct there was more than one to GDS, maret, cathedral schools etc. several applied to field and got in. yes there are a few on waiting lists as well
Anonymous wrote:we are a former Langley family with many friends still at the school and I agree with PP.
Their outplacement this year was not the best.
Zero accepted at Sidwell , 1 accepted at GDS. I am not sure about other “Big 5s” but seems like the same few kids who got into several of the top schools
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Its always going to be the rich and connected that get into the "Big 3" anyway, so no surprise. Being neither of those, we focused on other schools.
Not really. Mostly the kids from our K-8 who got into 9th grade were top athletes or URMs
We are not rich or connected, not an athlete, not URM, not an alum or sibling and our child got into a Big 3 school from a K8 this year. It does happen.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Its always going to be the rich and connected that get into the "Big 3" anyway, so no surprise. Being neither of those, we focused on other schools.
Not really. Mostly the kids from our K-8 who got into 9th grade were top athletes or URMs
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I just don’t believe this.
This was Norwood’s placement last year: https://www.norwoodschool.org/program/high-school-placement
By my count, 22 of out of the 48 kids went to a top tier school:
GDS — 2
Prep — 1
Holton — 4
Landon — 2
Maret — 2
NCS — 1
Potomac — 2
Sidwell — 5
STA — 3
People will say some of these aren’t top tier, but they’re all very strong. I don’t believe all these kids fell into the categories PP listed. How many 8th graders have developed an app anyway?!
I’d be careful interpreting the list above. This is not the number of individual students that ended up going to these schools, this is the number of acceptances the schools have issued. In most cases, from our experience, it’s the same kids who are getting multiple acceptances at these top tier schools ( elite athletes, URM, super scholars ) . For example, one very elite athlete ( and bright student) at our K-8 got into 4 of the “ Big 5”. When our school publishes acceptances, it might look like they had 4 students accepted at those schools when they in fact had only 1.
I think the list is showing matriculations, at least as to these schools. The bolded schools, some (but all listed above) with the numbers in parentheticals, are schools where Norwood grads ended up, and I'm sure the intent was to show the number of Norwood grads at each. Otherwise why would they have even bothered to list list numbers after Churchill and Whitman?
Anonymous wrote:
Not really. Mostly the kids from our K-8 who got into 9th grade were top athletes or URMs
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Its always going to be the rich and connected that get into the "Big 3" anyway, so no surprise. Being neither of those, we focused on other schools.
Not really. Mostly the kids from our K-8 who got into 9th grade were top athletes or URMs
Anonymous wrote:Its always going to be the rich and connected that get into the "Big 3" anyway, so no surprise. Being neither of those, we focused on other schools.
Anonymous wrote:Its always going to be the rich and connected that get into the "Big 3" anyway, so no surprise. Being neither of those, we focused on other schools.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I just don’t believe this.
This was Norwood’s placement last year: https://www.norwoodschool.org/program/high-school-placement
By my count, 22 of out of the 48 kids went to a top tier school:
GDS — 2
Prep — 1
Holton — 4
Landon — 2
Maret — 2
NCS — 1
Potomac — 2
Sidwell — 5
STA — 3
People will say some of these aren’t top tier, but they’re all very strong. I don’t believe all these kids fell into the categories PP listed. How many 8th graders have developed an app anyway?!
I’d be careful interpreting the list above. This is not the number of individual students that ended up going to these schools, this is the number of acceptances the schools have issued. In most cases, from our experience, it’s the same kids who are getting multiple acceptances at these top tier schools ( elite athletes, URM, super scholars ) . For example, one very elite athlete ( and bright student) at our K-8 got into 4 of the “ Big 5”. When our school publishes acceptances, it might look like they had 4 students accepted at those schools when they in fact had only 1.