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Private & Independent Schools
No, it serves all of the students who attend. |
Okay, but they primarily serve the paying customers, which are the full pay tuition families. The families on financial aid are receiving charity and are not keeping the lights on. They are only there due to the diversity initiatives that benefit the full pay families. |
Virtually all financial aid recipients are also paying customers. They just receive a discount based on their assessed need. An FA family with three kids at the school could be paying over $100,000 a year. FA allows schools to select best fit families who could not otherwise afford the full tuition. That is a boon to the school community. Imagine only being able to select amongst families who can pay $50,000 per year per kid. That would really dampen the quality of students. |
I would argue that restricting the school community to full pay families would have the opposite effect and improve the quality of students. By removing expensive diversity initiatives the school can focus on families who are more invested in their children. Paying half tuition or any sort of reduced tuition is like throwing money out of the door of the school. There are enough full pay customers that these programs are a waste. |
Lots of extremely talented students who fit with the school have parents who can't quite pay 50k/yr per kid. That's pretty indisputable. The pool of families who can pay that tuition is pretty small, and so limiting the student body to only them will inevitably result in admitting kids who aren't the best of the best. Also, why do you think FA is a "diversity initiative"? It's an enrollment management tool and something that ensures the highest quality student body. FA has been around decades before DEI became widespread. |
There is no evidence that financial aid improves the quality of the student body. If you have any, please provide it. Financial aid students are merely there for the benefit of full pay families, as described below. It is a diversity initiative that allows the school to market themselves are more accessible / less elitist and also allows families who want socioeconomic diversity to have some. However families who cannot even pay full tuition introduce problems to the school community. Families with so many kids they need financial aid are clearly spreading themselves too thin. Children benefit from parents investing in them with adequate resources available for them to raise a child successfully. Raising children well is expensive and pretending that a family in financial distress can do it equally to a family who is financially responsible would be just wrong. |
We know talented children come from a range of income brackets. Lots of brilliant people grew up in middle class households. Do we want to exclude super talented students from the school because their families can't foot $50,000 a year? I'd rather have those students in the school paying $20,000 or $25,000 than out of the school altogether. Do you have any evidence that financial aid reduces the quality of the student body? |
There is not a shortage of talented full pay applicants. Meanwhile, look up the size of the financial aid budget at your school. This money could be used for improving the school instead. |
What problems are introduced to the school community by families who do not pay full tuition? |
Do you have any evidence backing that up? Or is it just vibes? |
The huge number of applications and the low acceptance rate. |
| I assume you know that a) unqualified people apply, b) lots of those applications come from families needing aid, and c) many private schools aren’t all that selective. |
I worked at a pretty elite K-8 that had a huge surplus of applicants in the early grades but not much at all in middle schools. Over the years, they’d lose some kids to attrition and could not fill those seats with full-pay apps. Most of the highly aided students entered in 6th or 7th as a result. |
Do you have evidence for any of that? Paying full pay tuition is a low bar for families. |
The types of problems you see in low income households. |