So dumb you don’t even consider rich AND smart. No apology necessary, your embarrassment is enough punishment for you. |
| Being smart is not everything. Plenty of highly educated types walking their dog with double N95s outside. Not being academic, but being shrewd and driven will get you very far in life and often leads to lots of wealth.. |
Neither is being rich everything. |
| An answer to original question - yes, we know two families sending their sons to Georgetown Prep instead of WJ. |
Yes people do for many reasons OP |
Not everything. But it means a lot if you have your health and no substance abuse issues. |
So you just agreed with me then. |
by "shrewd" you mean amoral, right? that's often what leads to lots of wealth in this country. |
No, I’ll stick with the dictionary definition. America is a great county in large part to it’s capitalist system and it’s great capitalists. Getting wealthy within the law leads to numerous benefits to society in most cases—-job creation, innovation, tax revenue etc. |
|
The W schools have very smart kids, no argument there.
Facilities, network for kids, food quality, and sports— are far inferior to many privates. |
|
Family zoned in Churchill cluster here. Youngest kid (now a junior in college) attended MCPS through 8th. That's when we decided to pull him out and send to private HS. Best. decision. ever.
Second child started from K in private. Again it paid off. We sent her to a small parochial at about $10K a year. Her education was not disrupted because of covid. Was in person the entire 2020-21 school year. She will attend a pricey all girls school next year. Would never consider public again. I truly believe my son would not have gotten into his top 20 school without his private school high school education, and I believe that would be the case for my daughter as well. Plus, I don't want to have to worry about violence, school shootings, disruptions, very large class sizes, etc. Yup, worth every damn penny. |
I think as time goes on and the learning loss in public schools becomes more apparent, people will realize staying in public (or returning to public) was wrong decision. MCPS is too big and bureaucratic to effectively address this. They are making an attempt, but just listen to their BOE meetings and you might just run fast. They just go in circles and produce fancy powerpoint and video presentations but never implement anything. It is a disaster. |
I meant to add that one of their solutions will most likely be to shuffle kids around schools for equity. They will dilute any excellent schools by shifting students from poor performing schools to high performing schools and the bar will be set low everywhere. Just wait. |
If they do that even more of the affluent will leave MCPS for private school. |
|
I think as time goes on and the learning loss in public schools becomes more apparent, people will realize staying in public (or returning to public) was wrong decision. MCPS is too big and bureaucratic to effectively address this. They are making an attempt, but just listen to their BOE meetings and you might just run fast.
I meant to add that one of their solutions will most likely be to shuffle kids around schools for equity. They will dilute any excellent schools by shifting students from poor performing schools to high performing schools and the bar will be set low everywhere. Both of these are true. We live in a W cluster and got out after the Spring 2020 covid fiasco. Not going back to classrooms that are too large, impersonal education that caters to the troubled kids and those having trouble and ignores the quiet and the high flyers, and a Board of Education and Central Office at MCPS that can't even fix simple things like lead in water fountains let alone deal with consequences for problem HS students. Our children are getting a better education (still APs and still getting 5s) in private. |