Because they can’t afford to. If they could, they would. |
In some areas, people put their kids in private because they know they aren’t up to compete in the local publics. This is especially true if the local publics are majority Asian. |
I don’t know about DC but families in Whitman aren’t sending their kids to BCC because they aren’t zoned for BCC. We picked the house that worked for us and were happy when it turned out to be zoned for BCC instead of Whitman. |
Yep. I’ve found this to be absolutely true! |
“Aren’t up to compete” can also mean “Don’t want to spend hours in weekend school just to be three grade levels ahead.” ~ Asian |
Turns out all these schools offer great opportunities for enrichment. In fact, many even less affluent ones do too and the kids do great. Who would've known!?!6 |
I find this odd. We are in private school and most of are friends are as well and we are mostly zoned for the 'W' schools. Not being around Asians has never been discussed as one of the reasons for being in private - it's just a way of life. There's a private school world that you don't understand until you have been a part of it. There is an elitism that you will never really understand that includes belonging to the same country clubs, vacationing together, attending the same churches (if you are say, Catholic). And importantly, most of these kids will have jobs no matter how well or how poorly they do in high school and thereafter college because of their family and friend connections. Asian student performance therefore, plays no part in the motivation to go private. It would be odd to pay $30-50,000 to avoid Asian students. This is a stupid theory. |
*Attentive teachers who actually WANT to be in the classroom.
* Smaller class sizes than public schools. * Great writing curriculum. * Whole child development. * Emphasis on a variety of forms of art. * Opportunity for everyone to play sports/on sports teams. * Safety - no school shootings, other violence, etc. * Amazing field trips. * No cell phone use allowed during the school day. * Very limited Chromebook use - emphasis on handwritten assignments. * Like-minded parents/community. * One hour lunches, with a variety of healthy options. * Recess everyday through middle school. * Public speaking/debate emphasis. * Circuit competitions - spelling and geography bees. * * Lifelong network and alumni network. |
You are truly nauseating! Signed, your neighbor |
I appreciate the honesty. I mean, the logic is BS but I appreciate that the poster is owning the elitist attitude. My kid is in public school. He is a member of the same community pool as his friends, we go on vacations with families from school, we are in the same Scout Troop and rec sport teams as his friends. More likely then not he will end up with a good job because he is attending good schools and will go to college. Not all that different except that we are saving $20,000-$50,000 a year by sending him to a strong public school. |
Makes the experience better for the parents, you mean? Because students don’t give a shot about that. |
I actually think the same thing but have a somewhat different take on it. There’s a certain set of striver parents who work extremely hard and make a whole lot of money. They’re wholly focused on their careers and don’t have a lot of extra time for their kids. They often wait to have kids until they’re in their mid to late 30s or older, and by the time the kids hit high school they’re in or close to their 50s and are so far removed from being young and so consumed with career and achievement that it never even occurs to them to consider public school no matter how good the school is. It’s another way to justify working so hard and soften the guilt they feel for neglecting their kids for all those years. “We do this for the kids,” they lie to themselves. It’s an insane way of thinking. |
#1 benefit for us is that my kid knows that a deadline and a due date are the same thing. |
It actually IS different but that's okay. Your experience in what you consider a "good" public school is far different than private school but you don't know that because your kid has never been to private school. If you want to know the difference, visit the private school forum and ask parents if a "good" public school is just like a private school. Having done that, I can tell you it's not and others will confirm this. And we may all end up shoulder to shoulder in the same college/university - but remember the private school kids are extremely well connected and will always fall back into/revert back to their elite social circle. Going to the same institution of higher education doesn't thereby make your kid "on par" with a private high school graduate. I think it's comforting for public school parents to tell themselves this but really think about how this plays out during and after college - their connections versus your own; their ability to own home right off the bat because of wealth vs. your own kids; their ability to secure better internships with possibly less impressive college credentials because of who they know vs. your own kids; who they are able to socialize with vs. who your kids are able to socialize with. I'm not trying to be a snob but it's a whole world that you don't know about. It's best not to pretend you understand it. |
This is actually NOT a thing. Most parents at our local public has their kids in their mid to late thirties and will be in their 50s when their kids are in high school. We left public for private and the age range is the same - oddly it skews a slightly younger. And a good number are stay at home moms so there is no career “distracting them from their children” and making them “so busy” that they can’t consider public school. This is a really far left theory that makes no sense. Whew! It is funny the things people tell themselves so they can sleep at night. |