Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is the education that much better than Whitman?
Not at all.
Yes, it’s a much better educational experience.
It's an inferior academic product
That’s your baseless opinion. What’s important is that colleges agree with me. As posted upthread, “Sidwell consistently sends a higher percentage of graduates to Ivy+ colleges than the W schools.”
https://moco360.media/202...o-college/
Facts are facts, and opinions are like
a-holes…
What facts did you just show with your link? Did it show that "Sidwell consistently sends a higher percentage of graduates to Ivy+ colleges than the W schools"? Do you know what fact is, a-hole?
Idiot
You clearly struggle with reading comprehension. You must be a W school graduate. 😝
Again where in the link it shows that "Sidwell consistently sends a higher percentage of graduates to Ivy+ colleges than the W schools"?
Help me out
Anonymous wrote:How do people pay this and save for college?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Maret now $51k for US. 10% increase.
A 10% increase?!? Are you sure?
Last year was $46k this year is $51k. It's actually a tad higher than 10%.
That’s a huge jump! Is that an all inclusive price (e.g., lunch, yearbook, fees (including technology/computer)?
It's tuition and lunch. There aren't any other fees other than textbooks for US. There is a one time new student fee of $1500 they've always had. They had a marginal increase last year when other schools went up pretty high. Even with a 10% jump, they appear to still be $5-7k lower than most DC independents.
Ok, thanks for clarifying. Is there a computer/laptop fee or is it included in the tuition?
They provide a Chromebook to MS students.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Maret now $51k for US. 10% increase.
A 10% increase?!? Are you sure?
Last year was $46k this year is $51k. It's actually a tad higher than 10%.
That’s a huge jump! Is that an all inclusive price (e.g., lunch, yearbook, fees (including technology/computer)?
It's tuition and lunch. There aren't any other fees other than textbooks for US. There is a one time new student fee of $1500 they've always had. They had a marginal increase last year when other schools went up pretty high. Even with a 10% jump, they appear to still be $5-7k lower than most DC independents.
Ok, thanks for clarifying. Is there a computer/laptop fee or is it included in the tuition?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is the education that much better than Whitman?
Not at all.
Yes, it’s a much better educational experience.
It's an inferior academic product
That’s your baseless opinion. What’s important is that colleges agree with me. As posted upthread, “Sidwell consistently sends a higher percentage of graduates to Ivy+ colleges than the W schools.”
https://moco360.media/202...o-college/
Facts are facts, and opinions are like
a-holes…
What facts did you just show with your link? Did it show that "Sidwell consistently sends a higher percentage of graduates to Ivy+ colleges than the W schools"? Do you know what fact is, a-hole?
Idiot
You clearly struggle with reading comprehension. You must be a W school graduate. 😝
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:60% POC, 1 in 4 to 1 in 5 on financial aid. What more do you want?
About 20% are on financial aid. I personally know a few of Sidwell’s financial aid recipients (because they’re open about it). They are all well educated professionals (e.g., combinations of two-parent feds, teachers, professors, journalists, etc). By US standards, these are solidly middle class and upper middle class families.
Sidwell is a great school, but there isn’t much economic diversity. It’s a school for the uber wealthy, regular wealthy and middle/upper middle class. There are very few, if any, impoverished students at Sidwell.
Speaking from our experience, this isn't really true. Sure, there are some very wealthy families, but most of the parent cohort we are friendly with are "regular" people ranging from nurses and city (DC) employees to non-profit workers etc. Like salaries in the 40,000-120,000 range if I had to guess. Doing well, but by DC standards, no where close to the 2 lawyer, seven figure incomes people in this thread are assuming.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is the education that much better than Whitman?
Yes, the overall educational experience is superior. Plus, Sidwell consistently sends a higher percentage of graduates to Ivy+ colleges than the W schools.
https://moco360.media/2023/09/13/where-montgomery-county-high-school-graduates-are-going-to-college/
Because it’s a completely different pool of kids (public schools educate everyone whereas Sidwell is selecting the advantaged few). Selection bias at its finest. Doesn’t make it a better school.
Yes, it does. Selection bias, well-prepared, wealthier and better resourced students (among many other reasons) are why Sidwell is a better school. Selection bias eliminates a lot of problem students, and it elevates the experience for the privileged few who remain. I know it’s not pc to say these things, but you know it’s true.
Would love to see this statement on their website rather than all that garbage about a welcoming, inclusive and diverse community of learners. Such hypocrisy.
It’s actually very diverse. Look it up
Sidwell bashers are disgruntled moms who would do the same in any school. You know the ones - incessantly bemoaning the learning gap, the principal etc. These threads are not serious or representative. There used to be a thread per week until everyone got sick of and run off the one constant complainer with a personal axe to grind.
Get a life, honestly
It is not possible for private school costing $60,000 per year to be diverse.
Yes, it is. They can curate gender, race and ethnicity and then provide significant FA (which Sidwell does) to attract the kids they want, even if they cannot come close to paying full freight.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is the education that much better than Whitman?
Not at all.
Yes, it’s a much better educational experience.
It's an inferior academic product
That’s your baseless opinion. What’s important is that colleges agree with me. As posted upthread, “Sidwell consistently sends a higher percentage of graduates to Ivy+ colleges than the W schools.”
https://moco360.media/202...o-college/
Facts are facts, and opinions are like
a-holes…
What facts did you just show with your link? Did it show that "Sidwell consistently sends a higher percentage of graduates to Ivy+ colleges than the W schools"? Do you know what fact is, a-hole?
Idiot
You clearly struggle with reading comprehension. You must be a W school graduate. 😝
If this person with emoji is an actual Sidwell parent, that’s an admission omission. I’m sorry, you should be ashamed of yourself. A fellow parent
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:60% POC, 1 in 4 to 1 in 5 on financial aid. What more do you want?
About 20% are on financial aid. I personally know a few of Sidwell’s financial aid recipients (because they’re open about it). They are all well educated professionals (e.g., combinations of two-parent feds, teachers, professors, journalists, etc). By US standards, these are solidly middle class and upper middle class families.
Sidwell is a great school, but there isn’t much economic diversity. It’s a school for the uber wealthy, regular wealthy and middle/upper middle class. There are very few, if any, impoverished students at Sidwell.
Speaking from our experience, this isn't really true. Sure, there are some very wealthy families, but most of the parent cohort we are friendly with are "regular" people ranging from nurses and city (DC) employees to non-profit workers etc. Like salaries in the 40,000-120,000 range if I had to guess. Doing well, but by DC standards, no where close to the 2 lawyer, seven figure incomes people in this thread are assuming.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is the education that much better than Whitman?
Not at all.
Yes, it’s a much better educational experience.
It's an inferior academic product
That’s your baseless opinion. What’s important is that colleges agree with me. As posted upthread, “Sidwell consistently sends a higher percentage of graduates to Ivy+ colleges than the W schools.”
https://moco360.media/202...o-college/
Facts are facts, and opinions are like
a-holes…
What facts did you just show with your link? Did it show that "Sidwell consistently sends a higher percentage of graduates to Ivy+ colleges than the W schools"? Do you know what fact is, a-hole?
Idiot
You clearly struggle with reading comprehension. You must be a W school graduate. 😝
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:60% POC, 1 in 4 to 1 in 5 on financial aid. What more do you want?
About 20% are on financial aid. I personally know a few of Sidwell’s financial aid recipients (because they’re open about it). They are all well educated professionals (e.g., combinations of two-parent feds, teachers, professors, journalists, etc). By US standards, these are solidly middle class and upper middle class families.
Sidwell is a great school, but there isn’t much economic diversity. It’s a school for the uber wealthy, regular wealthy and middle/upper middle class. There are very few, if any, impoverished students at Sidwell.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is the education that much better than Whitman?
Yes, the overall educational experience is superior. Plus, Sidwell consistently sends a higher percentage of graduates to Ivy+ colleges than the W schools.
https://moco360.media/2023/09/13/where-montgomery-county-high-school-graduates-are-going-to-college/
Because it’s a completely different pool of kids (public schools educate everyone whereas Sidwell is selecting the advantaged few). Selection bias at its finest. Doesn’t make it a better school.
Yes, it does. Selection bias, well-prepared, wealthier and better resourced students (among many other reasons) are why Sidwell is a better school. Selection bias eliminates a lot of problem students, and it elevates the experience for the privileged few who remain. I know it’s not pc to say these things, but you know it’s true.
Would love to see this statement on their website rather than all that garbage about a welcoming, inclusive and diverse community of learners. Such hypocrisy.
It’s actually very diverse. Look it up
Sidwell bashers are disgruntled moms who would do the same in any school. You know the ones - incessantly bemoaning the learning gap, the principal etc. These threads are not serious or representative. There used to be a thread per week until everyone got sick of and run off the one constant complainer with a personal axe to grind.
Get a life, honestly
It is not possible for private school costing $60,000 per year to be diverse.
Anonymous wrote:Two kids at Sidwell. It is not "worth it" or good value. Likely only incrementally better overall, and worse in some aspects, than public W options. Very hard to make economic argument though - like healthcare - you want the best for your loved ones and price is secondary consideration until not affordable. Sidwell is a business - while 20x more applicants than places they will continue to increase the price until demand drops. We will likely leave in next few years unless school undergoes major turnaround in accountability to students and parents - but not because they keep ratcheting up the tuition above inflation.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Maret now $51k for US. 10% increase.
Whoa. That reflects poor planning on the board's part.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why don’t they announce the tuition increases before the application deadline?
Just assume most schools will have a tuition increase and plan accordingly.