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I imagine it has been asked over the past two decades. It’s helpful to know what’s going on today. |
…? What? You’re mad that someone who can’t afford the tuition on their own gets family help in addition to qualifying for FA? What an absolutely bizarre take. |
| Norwood gave 50% remission to staff children at one point. Not sure what they do today. |
Maybe the school determined that with the amount her parents could afford to assist, she still qualified for FA. You don’t know what her financial situation is. Mind your own business. |
| When a school indicates “x%” receive financial aid, is that including the employees kids? And how needy are private school teachers? I see a lot of them have expensive college educations themselves. |
+100 |
| It I becoming much more common as it gets harder and harder to hire and keep teachers. |
So now you are mad that your children's teachers have fancy degrees but... Chose to teach at your school...?? |
If they don't have a rich spouse or rich parents helping, none could ever afford to send their kids to the schools that they teach at absent massive financial aid. |
This, would you prefer they be Phoenixes? |
I mean, it is my business if I pay tuition to the school and make annual donations to the annual fund. How the FA $ is allotted is every parent's business. She feels like she is entitled to the FA, so she specifically does not disclose the gifts from her parents in the forms. I think that's pretty common - for teachers and non-teachers alike. |
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No it’s not. And if you feel so strongly that it is, march into the financial aid office and tell them how you feel. |
Yeah, except the most recent discussion about this happened a few months ago. https://www.dcurbanmom.com/jforum/posts/list/1081138.page |