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10 Top Reasons to Go to Boarding School
Explore the top 10 reasons to choose boarding school education, including exceptional teachers, diverse extracurricular activities, and personal growth opportunities. This comprehensive guide highlights the unique advantages of boarding schools, from small class sizes to well-equipped facilities, preparing students for college and fostering a love for learning.

10 Top Reasons to Go to Boarding School

Why should you consider sending your child to boarding school? Wouldn't she do just as well at day school?

  • This is a common question for parents to ponder as they review their private school options.
  • You have made the decision to send him to a private school in principle.
  • Now it is just a matter of working out the details.

There are many reasons to go to boarding school. Academics, athletics, and extracurricular activities are just a few of the considerations. But there's more. Much more.

Here are the 10 top reasons why you should go to boarding school.

10. You will get great teachers who love to teach.

  • Boarding schools traditionally hire teachers with degrees in their subjects.
  • A large number of these experienced teachers also have advanced degrees in their field.
  • Typically, all are passionate about their subject and love to teach it to young people.

Because discipline is rarely a problem in boarding schools, these talented teachers get to teach without having to be traffic cops or paper pushers like their public school counterparts.

9. You will have great sports and sports facilities.

  • Most boarding schools have amazing sports facilities.
  • The range of sports and teams is mind-boggling.
  • You will find everything from squash to crew, hockey to basketball. Natatoria are common. So are equestrian facilities.
  • Many boarding school fitness facilities make commercial fitness
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5 Reasons To Choose a Girls' School

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5 Reasons To Choose a Girls' School
This article presents five compelling reasons for choosing a girls' school, including fewer distractions, specialized teaching methods, focused educational environment, expanded career aspirations, and leadership development. It highlights how girls' schools can foster confidence and encourage students to pursue diverse fields, including STEM.

There is a body of research that suggests that girls do learn differently from boys. So, if that is the case, maybe you should consider a girls' school for your daughter instead of sending her off to a coed school. Here are some points to ponder.

1. She will have fewer distractions.

The social static and inherent distractions that occur when you mix adolescent boys and girls in a coeducational school just do not happen in a girls' school. The social expectations and stereotypes can be broken down. There will be time enough later for the distractions that members of the opposite sex provide. Fewer distractions mean a girl can focus on being herself, finding out who she is, exploring new worlds, lines of thinking, and so much more. She can think outside the box with relative impunity. And that is a good thing.

This video offers an overview of the WISE program, a partnership between Garrison Forest School and Johns Hopkins University that is designed to help young women pursue interests in science and engineering.

2. She will benefit from teachers who are trained to teach girls.

Teachers in a girls' school are hired because they believe in this kind of education. They understand how girls learn. They provide the type of nurturing and encouragement a girl needs to become all that she can and wants to be. They give and cite role models

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5 Reasons to Choose a Boys' School

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5 Reasons to Choose a Boys' School
Uncover the benefits of boys' schools, including tailored teaching methods, reduced social pressures, and opportunities for personal growth. Learn how these institutions foster an environment where boys can excel academically, explore diverse interests, and develop into well-rounded young men without gender stereotypes.

5 Reasons to Choose a Boys' School

Single-sex education has a long and distinctive history in the annals of Western education.

It also has its dark side when you consider that only children of the upper classes were taught how to read and write. When the founders of this country began to grapple with the realities of building and advancing a nation built on democratic principles, they soon realized that education was one of the keys to future success.

The Phillips family, for example, invested substantial amounts of money to establish the now famous schools - Andover and Exeter - which bear their name. Many other visionaries did the same thing or followed their example, as you can see from this list of schools established in the 1700s. Those first schools were single-sex schools. Boys' schools. Girls didn't matter back then, apparently.

This vision statement from Woodberry Forest School in Woodberry Forest, Virginia, states the argument succinctly:

"Since the school’s founding in 1889, Woodberry Forest has sought to develop young men of intellectual thoroughness and principled integrity equipped with the capacity and eagerness to serve as leaders, learners, and citizens. Consistent with the historical founding of the school on Christian principles, we aspire to instill in every boy a deep sense of empathy, an enduring self-confidence buttressed by genuine humility, and an enthusiastic pursuit of lifelong

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5 Common Myths About Military Schools

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5 Common Myths About Military Schools
Military schools are often misunderstood, with myths shaping public perception. Are they only for troubled youth? Do they force students into military careers? This article debunks five common misconceptions, revealing the truth about discipline, leadership, and academic excellence in military schools. Whether you're a parent considering options or simply curious, this guide provides valuable insights into what these institutions truly offer.

5 Common Myths About Military Schools

Military schools seem to go in and out of favor with the general public.

  • Perhaps that has to do with some rather common misconceptions about what military schools are and how they operate.
  • The truth is that America's military prep schools carry on a proud tradition of academic and personal excellence, which has withstood the assaults of negative media attention and changing education trends.

Let's debunk five common misconceptions about military schools.

1. They are retirement outposts for retired officers.

Hollywood loves to portray military schools as retirement outposts for disgruntled officers with enormous grudges against just about everything and egos to match. (Think Taps with Timothy Hutton and George C. Scott.)

  • The truth is that most military schools have a headmaster who is styled a commandant or superintendent according to military nomenclature.
  • Becoming an administrator in a military school is a logical next career step for an officer who has retired from active service, usually in his '40s or '50s. Their egos? Most of them are pretty average.
  • Their job is to run the school, hire the best faculty they can find, and manage the finances. That's what any headmaster does.

Running any private school these days requires immense amounts of administrative savvy combined with a deft touch for fund-raising and the diplomatic skills of a career diplomat.

  • Being ahead of school is a multi-faceted job.
  • Being the head of
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Teaching in a Boarding School

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Teaching in a Boarding School
Teaching or working in a boarding school is quite unlike any job in a day school.

Teaching or working in a boarding school is quite unlike any job in a day school. Why? Because in most schools you will live above the store as it were. Most faculty, deans, and heads of school as well as some key support staff such as the admissions and development directors are housed in school accommodations as part of their conditions of employment.

Home and School

Boarding schools are self-contained communities. Students and faculty eat together. They share relaxing times watching TV and playing games together. That is because teachers and staff in a boarding school function in loco parentis. They take the place of parents literally and figuratively. They play a powerful role in shaping and guiding their young charges while they are at school. Because the students cannot escape at the end of classes, they cannot avoid teachers' strong influence on them. This is a major reason many parents send their sons and daughters off to boarding school.

This video offers an overview of Woodberry Forest School.

Finding a Job

How do you find a job in a private school? The best way is to use your network. Alums, colleagues past and present, friends, and family constitute the most important group of people who know you and can attest to your suitability, skills, and experience for employment better than anybody. They will often be

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