If I could put negative stars for this school, I would…read more
I attended Arlington Catholic a few years ago. My honest analysis of this establishment is that it is a complete and utter waste of money. This is a college prep. school, yet all this school prepared a multitude of its students for is the anxiety that you are never going to be good enough unless you get into Harvard University immediately after high school. Not Georgetown, not Yale, not Boston University nor Boston College. Harvard. Only.
This school will teach you that novelty trumps practicality, in any and all aspects of life. They do not inform you that over paying for undergraduate school results in unnecessary student debt. They do not teach you anything about preparing for college at all. They care about title, reputation, appearance, and nothing more.
They have 3 tiers of courses a student can choose to take: regular, honors, and advanced. The latter option is not always available for every subject, however.
So for all intents and purposes, I will say that regular and honors are the two main class types. If a student opts for regular, they will be considered to be inadequate. The teachers will disengage the students, will painfully, clearly hate coming to work every morning, explain the material poorly, and assign copious amounts of useless homework. Students will therefore almost always perform at a subpar level, furthering the inclination that regular students are "not smart."
They should just call them "remedial" courses. I have heard teachers say to honors students that they should not ever choose to be in the "stupid" class.
Did I mention this is a college prep school? So all the courses should be college prep courses, right? Wrong.
Honors students get an extra percentage added on to their GPA, and their grades will be rounded up, always, at the end of the quarter. Teachers treat these students well, engage them, and work with them more closely. That is of course, a good thing, but this should also apply to regular courses.
I used to take all standard courses. My senior year, I took honors classes and was astounded by how simple they were compared to the regular courses. My GPA sky rocketed as my grades soared.
I had to fight to get into Honors Spanish even though I had a solid A in the regular course. The head of the language department said that students like me can only hope to get a C at best in an honors course. She let me in, only, and I mean, ONLY, because she wanted to smirk when I "inevitably" fail the course. She did not like that someone like me would dare to try to get into an honors course.
I've seen students in the hallways bawling, because they were told they were too inept to even attempt an honors course.
Well, just for the record, I am fluent in Spanish. I earned one of the highest grades in the entire class. Solid A. This is the environment Arlington Catholic encourages: telling students they can't. Well, they are wrong, once again.
If you are still intent on sending your child to this high school, I implore you to have him or her take ALL honors courses, from Freshman year and onwards. The elitism and competition will still be a factor, but at least they will be treated respectfully by the faculty. If not, have them play football. The jocks are treated like gold, even if they take regular courses.
I iterate: this school cares only about its reputation. They will bolster and inflate the grades of the "top" honors students to keep the school looking good and competitive. They do not care about your child's wellbeing or future.
I also, as an aside, I would suggest not having your child attend an extremely expensive college right out of high school, unless you can pay out of pocket or your child gets multiple scholarships, or a free ride. I am currently debt free because of the college I attended. I was actually accepted into Lesley University because of my essay on Arlington Catholic, and how the school treats their students. But I still opted for the inexpensive alternative for my bachelor's. I am now on my way to attending an elite college for my masters degree without any loans to pay back.
This suggestion will run counter to what Arlington Catholic will most likely tell your child. I hope you take to heart what I wrote, as I had the perspective of a student who could see the establishment for what it really is, and I also got to see the greener side of the fence.