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    St Ignatius Day Nursery

    5.0 (2 reviews)

    St Ignatius Day Nursery Photos

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    7 years ago

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    The Birch Wathen Lenox School - I can't believe this middle school allows girls to wear such short uniform skirts.

    The Birch Wathen Lenox School

    2.3(3 reviews)
    0.4 miUpper East Side, Yorkville

    My son had the most wonderful experience at the Birch Wathen Lenox school. We were fortunate to…read morewatch the school flourish under the leadership of Bill Kuhn and my son never had a bad teacher, not one. Each teacher he had was excited and passionate about their subject mattered and we are so thankful Birch is where he landed. I couldn't recommend the school more highly.

    I attended BWL and what I experienced there has stayed with me long after graduation, and not in a…read moregood way. I was bullied on multiple occasions and ostracized for years. Not once did a staff member step in. It's obvious when a child is being neglected. Not once did anyone in a position of authority do anything about it. This was not a one time incident that slipped through the cracks, this was years of a student being left to fend for herself while the adults around her looked the other way. That silence from the adults in that building said everything about the culture of that school. And the culture starts at home. The parents at this school were some of the nastiest people I have ever encountered. It trickles down, and you can see it clearly in the way the students treat each other. When the adults in a community carry themselves with that level of entitlement and cruelty, do not be surprised when their children do the same. BWL is not just a school, it is an ecosystem, and the one I experienced was toxic from the top down. The faculty played favorites, openly and without apology. The head of the upper school was no exception. If you were not in the right circle, you were invisible at best and a target at worst. One incident in particular has never left me. My English teacher, Ms. Garbus, singled me out in front of others and accused me of not writing my own essay. Rather than handling the situation with any degree of professionalism or sensitivity, she interrogated me and asked me to define the word demise on the spot. I knew what it meant. But that is beside the point. The point is that a student should never be publicly humiliated by the very person who is supposed to support their growth. And then there is the decision to get rid of the library. A school that removes books and replaces them with AI is not a school that values education. It is a school that has lost the plot entirely. You cannot raise critical thinkers by removing the very tools that teach children how to think. I would not send my children to BWL. Not because of one bad experience, but because of a pattern of institutional failure that starts at the top and trickles down to every student who doesn't fit the mold. I went back to visit six years after graduating, and I can say with confidence that I do not like the direction this school is going in. It has not course corrected, it has not improved, and removing the library in favor of AI only confirms that. And if you need one final example of how little this school values its students, look no further than this. My photography teacher, Jessica Kaufman, threw out an entire year's worth of my developed film and original baby photos that had been given to her in trust for the yearbook. Irreplaceable memories, gone, because I did not pick up my belongings before a deadline. No phone call. No warning. No regard for what those photographs meant. That is not a school that cares about its students. That is a school that treats them as disposable. This school has never been going in the right direction, and the evidence is still there for anyone willing to look. The school accepted far more students than the space could reasonably accommodate. Walking those hallways between classes felt suffocating, like being crammed into a tin of sardines. Personal space, breathing room, and basic comfort were not a priority, and it showed.

    The Allen-Stevenson School - Art Festival in the Assembly Hall

    The Allen-Stevenson School

    5.0(1 review)
    0.4 miUpper East Side

    a fine boys' school on Upper East. a lovely physical plant. Good history. I believe they enroll…read moreboys till 9th grade. my Prep school used to get sophomore transfers from Stevenson, who would be guys who'd graduated. Good athletic program. My son is involved in a wrestling program here, www.grapplingorillas.com which is also excellent. It's run by the Stevenson coach..

    From the owner: Founded in 1883, The Allen-Stevenson School is dedicated to providing the very best Kindergarten…read morethrough Eighth Grade education for boys. We focus on boys' formative years. Boys experience significant developmental milestones from their time as kindergarten students to when they ultimately graduate from the Eighth Grade. Here at Allen-Stevenson, we build a solid foundation for boys to explore and discover their interests and passions in a supportive environment as they mature and grow. As experts in kindergarten through eighth-grade boys' education, our focus extends well beyond ensuring our students' academic success. Our educational leadership and faculty bolster our boys’ social-emotional and intellectual growth and enrich their learning both inside and outside the classroom as they mature from young elementary school students into their early adolescence.

    Photos
    The Allen-Stevenson School - Lower Division Winter Concert

    Lower Division Winter Concert

    The Allen-Stevenson School - A-S Athletics offers every boy the opportunity to participate. Eight interscholastic sports provide ample choices for the A-S athlete.

    A-S Athletics offers every boy the opportunity to participate. Eight interscholastic sports provide ample choices for the A-S athlete.

    The Allen-Stevenson School - Kindergarten boys learn about how plants grow in the different hydroponics and aquaponic systems in the Greenhouse.

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    Kindergarten boys learn about how plants grow in the different hydroponics and aquaponic systems in the Greenhouse.

    St Ignatius Day Nursery - elementaryschools - Updated June 2026

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