Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It is my understanding that the fifth grade admits are the new Cathedral choristers who come from both private and public schools. Occasionally, a spot will open if a boy leaves, but that is rare.
You can’t become a Chorister without first being admitted to STA. You have causality going the wrong way.
You missed the point
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It is my understanding that the fifth grade admits are the new Cathedral choristers who come from both private and public schools. Occasionally, a spot will open if a boy leaves, but that is rare.
You can’t become a Chorister without first being admitted to STA. You have causality going the wrong way.
Anonymous wrote:It is my understanding that the fifth grade admits are the new Cathedral choristers who come from both private and public schools. Occasionally, a spot will open if a boy leaves, but that is rare.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For those with sons who transitioned to STA from a public, what’s the hardest thing about the process?
getting in from public. They seem to admit 99% of their kids from private schools.
Depends on the grade. Lots of public school admits at 4-6th. For upper and high school, the kids from private schools are just more competitive. Why? STA has a strong focus on liberal arts and writing. By the time they graduate, even the middle of the pack kids are strong writers. One of the jokes about STA boys is that they can talk to a wall. Being articulate and verbal is very important. Private schools do a better job of teaching writing and critical thinking.
If you want your kids to get into STA, make sure they are highly proficient writers, preferably at a level 2-3 grades ahead of their public school peers.
This just isn't true. My son applied last year from public and they took 0 public school admits for 5th and one public school kid for 6th and this was a sibling. I'm not sure about for 4th. This came straight from the AD and was verified by friends of ours in the school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For those with sons who transitioned to STA from a public, what’s the hardest thing about the process?
getting in from public. They seem to admit 99% of their kids from private schools.
Depends on the grade. Lots of public school admits at 4-6th. For upper and high school, the kids from private schools are just more competitive. Why? STA has a strong focus on liberal arts and writing. By the time they graduate, even the middle of the pack kids are strong writers. One of the jokes about STA boys is that they can talk to a wall. Being articulate and verbal is very important. Private schools do a better job of teaching writing and critical thinking.
If you want your kids to get into STA, make sure they are highly proficient writers, preferably at a level 2-3 grades ahead of their public school peers.
This just isn't true. My son applied last year from public and they took 0 public school admits for 5th and one public school kid for 6th and this was a sibling. I'm not sure about for 4th. This came straight from the AD and was verified by friends of ours in the school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For those with sons who transitioned to STA from a public, what’s the hardest thing about the process?
getting in from public. They seem to admit 99% of their kids from private schools.
Depends on the grade. Lots of public school admits at 4-6th. For upper and high school, the kids from private schools are just more competitive. Why? STA has a strong focus on liberal arts and writing. By the time they graduate, even the middle of the pack kids are strong writers. One of the jokes about STA boys is that they can talk to a wall. Being articulate and verbal is very important. Private schools do a better job of teaching writing and critical thinking.
If you want your kids to get into STA, make sure they are highly proficient writers, preferably at a level 2-3 grades ahead of their public school peers.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For those with sons who transitioned to STA from a public, what’s the hardest thing about the process?
getting in from public. They seem to admit 99% of their kids from private schools.
Anonymous wrote:For those with sons who transitioned to STA from a public, what’s the hardest thing about the process?
Anonymous wrote:Teach your child about drugs and drinking prior to high school.
Anonymous wrote:Invite only parties still exist at the high school level and can be cruel and elitist.