Sunday, August 18, 2019
Boarding Schools and Education :: Exploratory Essays Research Papers
    Ã  Ã  Ã   For most people boarding schools  conjure up thoughts of young men in navy     blue blazers with white shirts and a tie going to a beautiful school with  ivy     covered walls and the game of polo being played in the distance.Ã   Oh,  and don't     forget thoughts of parents with fat wallets and a family trust fund.Ã    This is     what Gordon Vink, the director of admissions at Mercersburg Academy in     Pennsylvania, calls the "Holden Caufield-Catcher in the Rye  syndrome"(Parker     111), a book about the troubles a boy faces at his prep boarding school.     Ã       Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã   To an extent the image holds true.Ã   Prep  schools offer collegiate type     atmospheres, have strict rules, and often teach generations of students from  the     same families.Ã   The simplest definition of a boarding school is a place  that     parents pay for a student to live and go to school.Ã   The school's  teachers,     coaches, and administrators live in dormitories with boarders and act as  their     family enforcing the strict rules, making disciplinary decisions, and  overseeing     behavior and academic performance.     Ã       Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã   Boarding schools can be one or all of the  following:Ã   academic boot camp,     a place for parents to put kids they don't want around or don't have the  time     for, a haven from deteriorating public schools, a necessary credential  for     children of the rich and famous, or a training ground for tomorrow's  leaders.     These schools range from small unknown institutions which will accept anyone,  to     the elite schools, which are very selective and are a pipeline to  Ivy-league     schools and success.     Ã       Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã   Boarding schools are superior to public day  schools.Ã   Proponents of     boarding prep schools claim the schools offer unparalled discipline, a  stronger     curriculum, exellent facilities, a way to get in to better colleges, a  superior     learning environment, staggering extra-curricular options, and allow students  to     attain a higher level of performance.Ã   Opponents argue that the  astronomical     cost, anywhere from $8000 to $25,000 per year for the most elite, is too     expensive.Ã   They also claim the rules are too extreme and suffocating,  and that     students experience an abundance of stress.     Ã       Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã   The biggest argument against boarding schools  is cost.Ã   With an average     cost of $8000 to $25,000 (Topolnicki 100), many parents ask:Ã   Are  private     boarding schools worth the expense?  					    
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