Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I spent a summer at Milton Academy as part of an honors program in high school and I LOVED it. I lived in a nearby town but I wanted to go to boarding school so badly. My parents were public school teachers and wouldn't let me apply. So I do think for some kids, boarding school is wonderful. However, that was a long time ago, and now I would worry about drugs. Kids from wealthy families generally go to boarding schools and have access to money for drugs. it is a huge problem. I say - why not compromise with a couple of summer programs OR maybe only two years of boarding school (junior and senior year)..
Do I escape these wealthy kids by moving out of my Chevy Chase neighborhood or private day school?
That would be a start. But even if you stay there, at least you can see your kid every day, and if you do a decent job can spot signs of drug use.
Anonymous wrote:I spent a summer at Milton Academy as part of an honors program in high school and I LOVED it. I lived in a nearby town but I wanted to go to boarding school so badly. My parents were public school teachers and wouldn't let me apply. So I do think for some kids, boarding school is wonderful. However, that was a long time ago, and now I would worry about drugs. Kids from wealthy families generally go to boarding schools and have access to money for drugs. it is a huge problem. I say - why not compromise with a couple of summer programs OR maybe only two years of boarding school (junior and senior year)..
Do I escape these wealthy kids by moving out of my Chevy Chase neighborhood or private day school?
Anonymous wrote:I spent a summer at Milton Academy as part of an honors program in high school and I LOVED it. I lived in a nearby town but I wanted to go to boarding school so badly. My parents were public school teachers and wouldn't let me apply. So I do think for some kids, boarding school is wonderful. However, that was a long time ago, and now I would worry about drugs. Kids from wealthy families generally go to boarding schools and have access to money for drugs. it is a huge problem. I say - why not compromise with a couple of summer programs OR maybe only two years of boarding school (junior and senior year)..
Do I escape these wealthy kids by moving out of my Chevy Chase neighborhood or private day school?
Anonymous wrote:There are no wolves in the deep end of the pool. But, if your high school student prefers to sit with mummy in the shallow end of pool with rubber rafts around the midsection and limbs that certainly your choice.
I spent a summer at Milton Academy as part of an honors program in high school and I LOVED it. I lived in a nearby town but I wanted to go to boarding school so badly. My parents were public school teachers and wouldn't let me apply. So I do think for some kids, boarding school is wonderful. However, that was a long time ago, and now I would worry about drugs. Kids from wealthy families generally go to boarding schools and have access to money for drugs. it is a huge problem. I say - why not compromise with a couple of summer programs OR maybe only two years of boarding school (junior and senior year)..
Anonymous wrote:After school, certainly not.
But at dinner, they certainly should be.
You must know, that has in fact been proven to be a MAJOR factor in future success?
What? Kids attending private day high schools who are not engaged in sports, debate, acting, and after school clubs/activities and report promptly for dinner and homework duty at home?
Anonymous wrote:Op here. Do you think local private schools are comparable up Andover? I'm not from this area and would consider saving a ton in order to send dc to a local private. This might be a compromise for dh in terms of dc getting a great education but not going to his alma mater.
Dc is open to the idea. We toured a few years ago when in the area and he was excited. Now that it's more of a reality, he seems excited but nervous about being on his own. Dh says totally normal at this stage and I say keep my baby home!!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Never in a million years would i send a kid to boarding school. My college friends who came from them had either very messed up home lives which made it preferable or logistical reasons (parents stationed in developing countries with no good educational option). I am sure it is great for some people, but not worth the loss of closeness with the kid ( who is still a kid).
It's true that most kids in American boarding schools come from "messed up" home situations. Most of the other kids are foreign.
Day school person here -- but man do you all sound insular and provincial.
Not OP. Most of the opinions that say, " I did not go to boarding school and would never consider sending my child to boarding school b/c..." Are not particularly helpful.
From those with actual experience, it sounds like the best choice is to consider if your child wants to go.
As for boarding school is for kids with "messed up home lives, etc", OP is talking about Andover not reform school. Andover accepts around 20% of applicants less than most colleges.
Yes, i am one of the postrs who based it on my college friends. I am indeed referring to Andover, Exeter, etc. They were very bright
kids, but with absentee or messily divorced parents. And those are the ones who ended up at my Ivy.
So are you implying that Andover and similar boarding schools have more kids from "absentee or messily divorced parents" than say Sidwell, GDS, STA and other private day schools? I kind of doubt it but it would make an interesting study...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Maybe I am selfish but I want to be with my child as they are becoming who they will be.
I agree here. Your instincts are selfish. Beware, your doting presence may thwart who they would have become.
whereas throwing them to the wolves will support their finest ambitions?
Anonymous wrote:Maybe I am selfish but I want to be with my child as they are becoming who they will be.
I agree here. Your instincts are selfish. Beware, your doting presence may thwart who they would have become.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Private boarding school certainly takes out the 'daily schlepping and waste of time factor' in exchange for 24/7 intellectual stimulation in the classroom, on stage, playing fields, in Dorm masters homes, and in the dining halls.
With the addition of skype, social media, cell phones and ease of getting around today the top notch boarding school is not this isolated banishment to Siberia that many here think. In fact, there may be more resurgent advantages over helicoptering back and forth with in traffic and figuring out how kids get to this and that after school activity/enrichment seamlessly.
At the end of the day high school kids I know aren't as a rule hanging out with mummy and daddy after school.
After school, certainly not.
But at dinner, they certainly should be.
You must know, that has in fact been proven to be a MAJOR factor in future success?
After school, certainly not.
But at dinner, they certainly should be.
You must know, that has in fact been proven to be a MAJOR factor in future success?