+1 OP, are you looking for applause with this post, or what? |
Our tuition has barely gone up. ( Christian K-8) but I don’t just give extra money. I support them in person as well, volunteering my time, there are plenty of people that do neither so i feel good about my choices. |
Our school provides a very nice house for the HOS, but on the flip side, they have to open it for big events several times a year. Obviously the family’s spaces upstairs are off limits, but I still wouldn’t like having to keep most of my home not just “drop-in visitor ready” at all times but “drop-in mega-donor ready.” And of course when the parent decides to change jobs they also lose their home. Upside, the kids can walk to school in under two minutes. |
This is the reason. People who send their kids to your expensive school will pay and there is a line of parents standing just outside the front door who are also willing to pay. The schools are businesses and will charge what they can get. |
The financial aid parents are already free loading off the the tuition that full pay families are paying. If you are full pay, you are already contributing more than average due to the free loaders. |
Glad you will at least be giving a $1 each year to help with participation rates. That's helpful. One word of warning - I would not follow this approach if your school doesn't go through 12th. It will hurt yourapplication if you need to apply out for higher grades. |
Good. Glad someone is calling these schools out. St Mary’s tuition seems ti go up every year by 5 pct or more, PLUS large increases in fees this year. |
You understand how big Harvard's endowment is, right? It might be dwindling these days, given the assault on academic freedom by Trump and his followers of the American fascist party, but it's still HUGE. Also, a smaller budget means fewer teachers, fewer field trips, fewer everything. |
$1 is just downright nasty. Instead of being a jerk why not just volunteer and call it a day? No need to make a political statement with the $1. Nowhere is tuition priced out according to the incomes of the parents that make up the body. It comes down to their needs and yes profit. If you can’t afford to send your kid to private school, I’m sorry.. take your measly $1 to public school. Or better yet, plan better. Factoring things like school cost, cost of living, salary increases are all things to consider when deciding to have children.. deciding what career path to embark on.. deciding whether to put your kids in private school. Are you people really out here just having babies and not forward thinking at all? |
How else will schools pay for the rising costs of benefits for faculty and staff? You realize these costs go up every year, right? |
You're clueless. Privates would prefer you donate a dollar rather than nothing, because a big part of their marketing goal is that they can claim they have 100% fundraising participation (look how our families love us!!! @blessed ![]() |
Do you feel this type of context switching and multi tasking is unique to HOS? Folks in non-profits do this all day everyday. Your HOS might not be making a lot but there are plenty of them who are. Further, a great amount of the fundraising and tuition increases are not going to teacher raises or even building upkeep as much as it’s going to new buildings/ facilities / campus that really aren’t needed. Why are some HS trying to rival small college campus or boarding schools? |
That PP is clueless ... in many ways |
Plus insufficient national press and PR around their 3rd trimester honor roll. |
If you want to know who supports the school, I would say the full pay families are all pulling their weight even without donations. |