Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What’s up with the literature and humanities reading lists at these schools? One has mainly classics, other has barely 1. What’s the agenda there?
It’s indicative of the culture of the school. One is narrow and tradition-bound. The other is broader but requires one take a certain view.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Which is less of a pressure cooker?
Maret, hands down.
The pressure to succeed at GDS is largely self-directed by the students. The amazing faculty (and quite often, their parents example) inspire the kids to aim high, and they do. But it comes from the students. But the pressure comes from the students. They know that when it comes to changing the world, there’s no time like the present.[/quot
Striving is ingrained?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Which is less of a pressure cooker?
Maret, hands down.
The pressure to succeed at GDS is largely self-directed by the students. The amazing faculty (and quite often, their parents example) inspire the kids to aim high, and they do. But it comes from the students. But the pressure comes from the students. They know that when it comes to changing the world, there’s no time like the present.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Which is less of a pressure cooker?
Maret, hands down.
The pressure to succeed at GDS is largely self-directed by the students. The amazing faculty (and quite often, their parents example) inspire the kids to aim high, and they do. But it comes from the students. But the pressure comes from the students. They know that when it comes to changing the world, there’s no time like the present.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Which is less of a pressure cooker?
Maret, hands down.
Anonymous wrote:Which is less of a pressure cooker?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:GDS was the first top private school in the nation’s capital to be racially integrated and continues to set the bar for social justice learning.
It was years ago that GDS chose image over impact - its social justice curriculum is real, it primarily for show and without soul.
Anonymous wrote:GDS was the first top private school in the nation’s capital to be racially integrated and continues to set the bar for social justice learning.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:GDS and Maret are completely in different tiers. GDS is at the top or tied at the top of the first tier, aka the Big Three on DCUM. Maret is the next tier, along with peers like Potomac. Still very good schools.
Twice wrong. Much easier to get in to GDS than any of the other schools named.
Maret has less openings, and is therefore often the hardest to get an admit, yes. However, it's not in the same league academically as GDS, SFS or STA/NCS. There's nothing controversial about that statement; it's just the reality.
Also there are some grades--e.g. 7th--where GDS has fewer openings than Maret and admissions are more competitive.
Anonymous wrote:What’s up with the literature and humanities reading lists at these schools? One has mainly classics, other has barely 1. What’s the agenda there?
Anonymous wrote:What’s up with the literature and humanities reading lists at these schools? One has mainly classics, other has barely 1. What’s the agenda there?