Anonymous wrote:Present, involved, aware, communicative, and friendly such that parents feel free to communicate any concerns about their children or their child's classmates or friends behavior to the parents concerned. The risky use I have observed as a very involved parent throughout many years and several children in the GDS Upper School has been limited to alcohol and marijuana. I disapprove of both.
The math, science, english, history, and arts programs at the School are exceptionally strong in both breadth of curriculum offerings and teacher excellence.
Anonymous wrote:I am concerned that today's zero tolerance together with the "Community of Concern" approach and the general relaxation of the laws regarding marijuana have led to certain unintended, undesirable consequences. Instead of drinking beer as private school kids in the DC area did in the 70's and 80's, they now binge hard alcohol or smoke more potent weed, or vape THC which could destroy their lungs or kill them. Prescription drug abuse, including opioids, is more widespread. How is this progress?
Anonymous wrote:Present, involved, aware, communicative, and friendly such that parents feel free to communicate any concerns about their children or their child's classmates or friends behavior to the parents concerned. The risky use I have observed as a very involved parent throughout many years and several children in the GDS Upper School has been limited to alcohol and marijuana. I disapprove of both.
The math, science, english, history, and arts programs at the School are exceptionally strong in both breadth of curriculum offerings and teacher excellence.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think is is easier for kids these days to stay out of the party crowd. There is less pressure to be in it, it is not viewed as cool anymore, and the partiers seem to be looked down upon instead of glorified (except amongst themselves). It seems that having the option of virtual gatherings helps a lot too. You can't pass a vape through the headphones.
Kids seem to have caught onto the reality that a kid who is using needs to get other to use too so they don't look as bad, and so if one is caught, they all are caught. It's similar to the parents on here trying to say everyone is doing it, not just my kid. Kids today are more exposed through the online world to the dangers of allurement, and they have become wary of those who would try to use peer pressure to bring them down to their level.
Glad your kid has substituted a gaming addiction for a partying one. Hope he or she makes many “virtual” friends in college.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think is is easier for kids these days to stay out of the party crowd. There is less pressure to be in it, it is not viewed as cool anymore, and the partiers seem to be looked down upon instead of glorified (except amongst themselves). It seems that having the option of virtual gatherings helps a lot too. You can't pass a vape through the headphones.
Kids seem to have caught onto the reality that a kid who is using needs to get other to use too so they don't look as bad, and so if one is caught, they all are caught. It's similar to the parents on here trying to say everyone is doing it, not just my kid. Kids today are more exposed through the online world to the dangers of allurement, and they have become wary of those who would try to use peer pressure to bring them down to their level.
Glad your kid has substituted a gaming addiction for a partying one. Hope he or she makes many “virtual” friends in college.
Anonymous wrote:This actually terrifies me about private school. We have an expensive rental house next door and befriended the group of recent college graduates that moved in. They invited us over for a get together. All of them were doing cke openly. All went k-12 private schools.
Anonymous wrote:I think is is easier for kids these days to stay out of the party crowd. There is less pressure to be in it, it is not viewed as cool anymore, and the partiers seem to be looked down upon instead of glorified (except amongst themselves). It seems that having the option of virtual gatherings helps a lot too. You can't pass a vape through the headphones.
Kids seem to have caught onto the reality that a kid who is using needs to get other to use too so they don't look as bad, and so if one is caught, they all are caught. It's similar to the parents on here trying to say everyone is doing it, not just my kid. Kids today are more exposed through the online world to the dangers of allurement, and they have become wary of those who would try to use peer pressure to bring them down to their level.
Anonymous wrote:I think is is easier for kids these days to stay out of the party crowd. There is less pressure to be in it, it is not viewed as cool anymore, and the partiers seem to be looked down upon instead of glorified (except amongst themselves). It seems that having the option of virtual gatherings helps a lot too. You can't pass a vape through the headphones.
Kids seem to have caught onto the reality that a kid who is using needs to get other to use too so they don't look as bad, and so if one is caught, they all are caught. It's similar to the parents on here trying to say everyone is doing it, not just my kid. Kids today are more exposed through the online world to the dangers of allurement, and they have become wary of those who would try to use peer pressure to bring them down to their level.