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Choosing a school: Pine Crest
Jan 23rd, 2011 by bocaparent

The Pine Crest School prides itself on being a small campus that nurtures leadership and independence through award-winning academics.

The Boca campus at 2700 St. Andrews Blvd., has about 850 students in prekindergaren through eighth grade. They move on to the Fort Lauderdale campus, 1501 Northeast 62nd St., for high school.

Administrators say they know every kid’s name.

“We really get to know the children and know them well,” said Tammy Stamm, assistant head of the middle school. “You can’t get lost in this school.”

The school focuses on challenging academics, as well as the arts and athletics, plus leadership and character education.

The students do charity projects, and a science teacher runs a chapter of Roots & Shoots, the international kids service organization. Eighth-graders  are offered a class on “social issues.”

Teachers and counselors help students get organized and teach them how to study.

Students get top scores in the nation and state on French and Spanish exams. The chorus sings at Carnegie Hall. And students put out an award-winning
yearbook.

Tuition at the nonprofit school averages about $20,000 a year and includes lunches and textbooks.

Curriculum

Spanish, French and Mandarin Chinese are among the core classes.

Most classes are taught at the same level, except for math, which offers four levels, depending on ability. For example, some kids can work up to Algebra 2 in eighth grade.

Technology

Classrooms are equipped with smart boards.

Sixth- through 12th-grade students are required to have laptops. Teachers put notes and assignments online, though some also use textbooks in the classroom, as well.

The school has a big auditorim for performances and soundproof rehearsal rooms, as well as a well-equipped TV studio.

Admissions process

  • Submit application and make an appointment for administrators to meet your child.
  • For pre-K, kindergarten and first grades, students will have a developmental assessment.
  • For incoming second- through fifth-graders, students come for a Saturday visit and evaluation and later a class visit.
  • Sixth- through eighth-graders must take the SSAT. (Register online for the next one.) The school expects to have about 10 openings for sixth grade next fall.
  • The school has an ongoing admissions process, but assessments are being done now for next year.

Other details

  • The school day runs from about 8 a.m.-3:20 p.m. Pine Crest provides transportation between the Boca and Fort Lauderdale campuses.
  • After-care is available.
  • Uniforms: Yes.
  • Sports include football, basketball, lacrosse, tennis, baseball and swimming. Ballet is offered as a PE class and also after school.
  • Financial aid is available.
  • Parents are expected to volunteer.
  • Tutoring, fine arts and sports lessons are available after school for a fee.

Summer

Pine Crest offers a host of summer camp programs for kids age 4-14. Get the details and register online. www.pinecrest.edu/bocasummer

Learn more

Vist the school’s website, or call the Boca campus at 561-852-2801.

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Choosing a school: Saint Andrew’s
Jan 3rd, 2011 by bocaparent

If you’re seeking a well-rounded private education for your children – where they can move seamlessly from those tender prekindergarten days through high school graduation – a tour of Saint Andrew’s School should be on your list.

The Jog Road campus serves 4-year-olds through 12th-graders, where the “vertical integration” of curriculum allows kids to build on the previous year’s academics, without having to switch schools. They can start Chinese or Spanish in kindergarten – three or four days a week. Students may have the same music teacher for years.

A few years ago, the city estimated that about half of Boca’s children were enrolled in a private school. While the recent economic downturn may have had some effect on enrollment, private education is still in great demand here. Saint Andrew’s added prekindergarten only three years ago and is fully enrolled, with 1,300 students in pre-K through 12th grade.

Saint Andrew’s is a nonprofit, with tuition averaging about $20,000 a year.

The school campus is much like a small college – neat and manicured. Saint Andrew’s lower school, added in 2000, is LEED-certified, built to environmentally friendly standards. And the playground equipment is designed for circular motion, which stimulates the brain.

There are “smart boards” in all the classrooms, and fifth-graders are trying out iPads. But beyond that, technology is not pervasive. Teachers want the kids to take notes by hand, they don’t hand out laptops, and wi-fi isn’t everywhere on campus.

The school’s mission is to nurture the students in mind, body and spirit. It offers a rigorous International Baccalaureate program for the upper grades (and soon, the lower grades, too).

The program is part of the school’s worldly focus. While it is affiliated with the Episcopal Church, Saint Andrew’s is independent and embraces students of all faiths. Students attend chapel, but the speakers focus on multicultural, thought-provoking messages.

“It’s very inclusive, very respectful,” said Carlos Barroso, director of marketing and communications.

Part of the Episcopal tradition is service oriented. Every grade does a service project. A common message to the students is: To whom much is given, much is expected, said Denise Redington, associate director of admissions.

For those anxious middle years, the school is proactive about bullying and drugs, and teachers are vigilant, Redington said. Students follow an honor code.

“It’s cool to be smart here,” she said.

Sports are a big part of the Saint Andrew’s experience. Upper school students are required to play a sport. Well-known Saint Andrew’s alumni include champion boxer Steve Geffrard and young golf sensation Morgan Pressel.

The school has 10 tennis courts, an Olympic size pool (swimming is part of PE), and two gyms.

“The scholar athlete does well here,” Barroso said. “They’re balanced out.”

For arts, middle school students take performing arts every day. Upper school students can take song-writing classes or stage crafts. They produce three drama productions a year in the school’s 653-seat theater, which is also used by the Boca Raton Symphonia.

Saint Andrew’s also has a co-ed bagpipe band, a nod to its Scottish founders.

About 75 percent of Saint Andrew’s graduates go the most competitive, or highly selective colleges, Redington said. But the guidance counselors work hard to ensure students end up with a good match. Close to 90 percent stay at the first college they go to, she said.

Other details:

  • Uniforms are required in lower grades; dress code in upper grades.
  • Each division – lower, middle and upper grades  – has its own library and dining hall.
  • The school day runs roughly 8 a.m. to 3:30 p.m., depending on the grade.
  • Before- and after-care is available.
  • About 100 students – mostly international – board at the school.
  • Tuition: Averages about $20,000 a year; includes food and tutoring. Books extra. (Need-based financial aid is available).

Getting in

The first step in applying is calling the admissions office to schedule a tour: 561-210-2000.

For the fall, Saint Andrew’s expects to have 48 slots for 4-year-olds. Testing begins in January, so apply now if you’re interested.

For sixth grade, the school expects to have 13-15 openings. For the best chance of getting in, apply by Feb. 1. The school will keep accepting applications after that.

Saint Andrew’s is looking for motivated students who will add to the school community. For older students, grades, test scores and recommendations are considered.

Class sizes

Sixteen per class in prekindergarten; 22 in kindergarten; up to 24 by third grade. Saint

Andrew’s uses the co-teacher model, with two full-time teachers in the classroom through fifth grade.

Summer camp

Saint Andrews also offers a summer camp that is open to the public. Registration is going on now.   Click here for more information.

To learn  more

Visit the school’s website.

For information on the public school academy programs for the middle grades, visit our middle school guide.

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