Anonymous wrote:What is the deal with the boys pants. Honestly this is a hard sell. Why not khakis? It makes the school look strange. Girls uniforms look find but really long. I have looked at the school list and it looks okay.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DJO often takes students from k-8 parrochials that were rejected from PVI. Just a heads up. I have also heard of many kids having excellent experiences at DJO, in sports and academics. Very high performing students might find more rigorous class options at fcps or aps.
-Former local K-8 parrochial teacher
I have two who went from a local k-8 to O'Connell then both on to Stanford. Bishop O'Connell can support strong academics (and athletics). Another child benefited greatly from their Muller Center.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DJO often takes students from k-8 parrochials that were rejected from PVI. Just a heads up. I have also heard of many kids having excellent experiences at DJO, in sports and academics. Very high performing students might find more rigorous class options at fcps or aps.
-Former local K-8 parrochial teacher
This was NOT the case at our K-8 at all!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DJO often takes students from k-8 parrochials that were rejected from PVI. Just a heads up. I have also heard of many kids having excellent experiences at DJO, in sports and academics. Very high performing students might find more rigorous class options at fcps or aps.
-Former local K-8 parrochial teacher
I have two who went from a local k-8 to O'Connell then both on to Stanford. Bishop O'Connell can support strong academics (and athletics). Another child benefited greatly from their Muller Center.
Did your kids play college sports?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Terrible academics. Really bottom of the barrel Catholic school. Many better Catholic high schools —> STJ, GP, SR, Gonzaga, Visi, OLGC, maybe even BI. Don’t waste your money.
Wow, you much have at least 7 kids then if you personally know the ins and outs of all those schools. Obviously the voice of first-hand authority![]()