Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Absolutely recommend you shadow with the grade (cohort) you are applying for vs shadowing with a grade above to see what MS looks like. More important to get a feel for the kids your DC will be with.
The school asks students to shadow with the MS grade they're applying for, not their current grade. I see your point about the kids DC will be with- should we ask for another shadow day/partial day?? What would be most helpful?
Anonymous wrote:Absolutely recommend you shadow with the grade (cohort) you are applying for vs shadowing with a grade above to see what MS looks like. More important to get a feel for the kids your DC will be with.
Anonymous wrote: Although it's bigger, does it still have all those things that people love about WES: strong academics, supportive yet challenging environment, kind families etc? Have seen mixed things on this forum.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What don’t people like about WES? What would you change? Seems too good to be true!
It’s tiny in middle school and can have graduating class as small as 30 kids. So if your kid isn’t vibing with the class, it can be very limited socially. Plus if a bunch of girls or boys leave along the years, the classes can be lopsided quickly.
Thanks for this perspective. Any other schools that are bigger but similar positives?
Norwood has closer to 55-70 kids in middle school. Much bigger than WES.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What don’t people like about WES? What would you change? Seems too good to be true!
It’s tiny in middle school and can have graduating class as small as 30 kids. So if your kid isn’t vibing with the class, it can be very limited socially. Plus if a bunch of girls or boys leave along the years, the classes can be lopsided quickly.
Thanks for this perspective. Any other schools that are bigger but similar positives?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What don’t people like about WES? What would you change? Seems too good to be true!
It’s tiny in middle school and can have graduating class as small as 30 kids. So if your kid isn’t vibing with the class, it can be very limited socially. Plus if a bunch of girls or boys leave along the years, the classes can be lopsided quickly.
Thanks for this perspective. Any other schools that are bigger but similar positives?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What don’t people like about WES? What would you change? Seems too good to be true!
It’s tiny in middle school and can have graduating class as small as 30 kids. So if your kid isn’t vibing with the class, it can be very limited socially. Plus if a bunch of girls or boys leave along the years, the classes can be lopsided quickly.
Anonymous wrote:What don’t people like about WES? What would you change? Seems too good to be true!
Anonymous wrote:PP did you feel like your kid with learning differences got the support they needed from the school (of course, in the end it's the student/parents that have to figure out what the kid needs). Thanks!
For students with mild to moderate learning differences, WES is an excellent option. The learning support teacher in MS is very strong, and she's an effective advocate for students with learning differences. She also teaches the ASC classes in MS, which provide additional support for those students. The number of students in ASC varies per class, but she does a great job with her ASC students!
PP did you feel like your kid with learning differences got the support they needed from the school (of course, in the end it's the student/parents that have to figure out what the kid needs). Thanks!
Anonymous wrote:DC had significantly more homework than MCPS peers, but how much they took home varied depending on whether or not it was a day with study hall. The workload was comparable to older DC's at another school.
We loved our experience and wish we'd sent older DC. It was a great balance of solid academics/high expectations from teachers, but it did not feel like a cutthroat environment. DC was very well prepared for one of DCUM's favorite "top" schools. Kids from WES go to a wide variety of HS.
Anonymous wrote:They do not have a block schedule. There are a one or two office hour periods built into the weekly schedule and if you don’t need to meet with a teacher you can use it as a study hall. You have the option to stay until 4:30 for an hour long study hall two days/week (unless you have a game scheduled for that time). DC had an hour of HW per night typicallly but was very good at using spare time at school so that helped.
The school is small so in MS you are looking at 32-37 per class roughly. We had no issues in our grade but other cohorts were less cohesive (both on the kid and parent fronts). We liked a lot of families in the year ahead of us but avoided the families in the grade below.
Anonymous wrote:What don’t people like about WES? What would you change? Seems too good to be true!