Many private schools waive tuition for the children of faculty. |
This too will pass. Nothing goes straight up or straight down. The purging of DEI in education might be the one positive impact that trump has on this country. |
Americans are strange. I don't understand the obsession with sports, particularly youth sports. But that's fine, I see how it teaches kids how to work hard for a goal, teaches them the benefits of hard work, and it provides more immediate feedback than other things. But they don't seem to think that the principles of challenging environments and hard work apply to academics. As if god assigned everyone an academic index at birth and working to exceed that index is a form of cheating. I understand the maternal instinct to shield your young children from competition, but even at young ages, shouldn't they be challenged academically? But in middle class families with fathers living in the home, why isn't there still so much reluctance to make your kids compete academically? Is it because the paternal instinct has been diverted to sports? Is it because you cannot participate in their academic successes as directly as you can their academic successes? |
This of course happens in public too. |
| FOMO plays a huge role |
Interesting because we did the opposite and we’ve been nothing but happy with MCPS. And I’m a private school educator planning to move to MCPS for the benefits. I think applications are probably up because of the boomer transition of wealth. I don’t think you can point to publics as the main reason, just look at their incredible college outcomes. Some schools are doing something right. Many privates great outcomes too. It’s certainly not as simple as public deteriorating when many are very pleased with their experience. |
Glad you are happy, but at the moment there are two threads in the MCPS forum entitled “Is anyone happy with MCPS” and “Is MCPS Losing its Edge.” Each has hundreds responses that are largely critical of MCPS. Plus Bethesda Magazine wrote a long, in depth article about a year ago that outlined a lot of significant problems with MCPS. All of which suggests that a lot of people think that MCPS is deteriorating. |
Didn’t read the article from last year but I’m sure they pointed to major issues with grading. I would not use random DCUM threads as your trusted source. OP is asking about private applications which can’t possibly be directly correlated to whatever the article said. Half these people live in DC or VA. The more likely answer is money. |
That is simply not true. Look at employee benefits pages on school websites. Many offer just a 25 percent cut in tuition or no cut at all. |
LOL |
I’m the PP you responded to with the LOL. Not sure what’s funny about me saying it’s a stretch for us to send kids to private but we are happy with the school so we make it work. We live in an old house with a tiny mortgage, drive old cars, and do not go on expensive trips. We have friends who have made the choice to send their kids to mcps and they spend big $ on their houses and trips and bar mitzvahs and camps and they are happy. People make different choices with how they spend their money based on their values/priorities/needs/personal experiences. |
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Oh, you're right. It's only 50% for faculty and staff have to wait 2 years. |
DP That's rich coming from an idiot that can't figure out how to post without screwing the formatting. |