You anger is seriously misplaced. You should take your concern up with the schools who award FA to families you seem unworthy to receive it. Asking anyone who receives FA if they feel bad about it is pretty dumb. Obviously they don't since they graciously accept it. |
Funny that you actually believe they abide by your designation. LOL |
When you give a building it's pretty obvious what they are using your gift for. |
Wow. You sound like a peach. |
Where are these 10K schools? None that I see in Rockville, Kensington, Silver Spring, Bethesda, Potomac, or Upper NW. Not everyone who lives/works in these areas is going to commute outside them ....where are you finding 10K high schools in this area??? |
Avalon and Brookewood are 10k schools . |
I would like to remind those complaining about FA on this board that if we are talking about middle or high school, aid is only offered if the school really wants your child. And why would they want a FA child. its not just for diversity it is so the school can keep up with the competition to send kids to top twenty colleges and universities. Brains and leadership in kids do not neatly correlate with high HHI parents. |
Aid is only offered if the school wants your child no matter what grade level. I know of two families admitted to the same LS with almost identical HHIs. Both applied for FA. One was given a 60% award package and the other was told they could not offer them any FA and would place them in a FA wait pool. We can only surmise they really wanted the child they awarded the FA to. |
We are HHI $100k (with significant medical expenses) receiving 40% FA. We deliberately chose a school which values socioeconomic diversity. People paying full freight know going in that some families not in the "have nothing" category will be receiving FA. Some schools and families may not value true socioeconomic diversity, which is a personal position, but many do. We are most grateful our school and families who choose it do. |
Wow, this thread was an eye opener. Full pay parent here for two kids in Catholic private - about 40K per year. Our HHI is over 500K, and assets are close to 5MM. I am completely onboard for FA for socioeconomic diversity. I am amazed that people making 250K+ are getting FA. That's not diversity, and it's not reaching out for students whose lives you can really change with an education. 250K HHI is solidly middle class, and it sounds like FA is a way to make private an affordable luxury, versus going to what is probably a really good public. If that's URM and 250 HHI, that starts to feel like window dressing to me. This has really spun my head around on FA.
I guess another question I have for the folks in that range - private HS still not free. Even at 50% tuition, with a couple kids in school that 20 or 30K a year. How do you save for college? Do you just plan on loading your kids up with debt? I know for some debt is the only way through school, but if you are making 250K a year you should be able to put your kids through at the very least a state school debt free. |
What factor do you think made them want one child over the other? Academics, diversity? |
one of the complicating issues around private school FA is that tuition remission for teachers is now taken out of the FA pot. So, a sizable portion of FA money that (I thought) was supposed help increase diversity, now supports teacher kids. Before I get flamed, I love our teachers and want them to be well compensated somehow - if it's not salary, then through tuition remission. And This wouldn't be an issue in my mind if the school made more of an effort to hire diverse teaching candidates, but the majority at our school are white and "from money." Maybe schools could separate FA for staff from the pool that is supposed to add some heterogeneity to the school...or hire more diverse staff!
|
It has been shown that children of families with your HHI will shun the kids that are URM, but the kids from $100K-$250K families will not, because they have diversity in their family/neighborhoods/lives. They often are the only ones in their family with that income or the 1st ones. So they get a $2/4K break and it makes it affordable and they bridge the gap between the 1% and the URM -1%ers. The $100K-$250K parents may have some college savings depending on what other expenses they have house/medical/etc, (and some have little retirement savings) but they will either work for the rest of their lives to pay for college, or they have an ethical ethos that kids need to have some "skin in the game" and they will need to take out some loans. |
Staff diversity is a school by school thing. Catholic privates have very diverse teaching staffs that reflect the student population (in general). Less so for GZ, but certainly at all the other DC schools. Can't speak for the 'burbs. |
So my kids are shunners because of my HHI? Kids know who has more and who has less of course, but they bond over commons interests (sports for my kids) versus income levels. My kids have no idea on our income, and I keep it that way. I'm always amused when one of them comes home and says something about someone's income, house value, or how much someone's new car cost - I always respond the same way "How did that come up in polite conversation?" And I elected to put them in very diverse private versus a 95% white public - shun that. |