My experience was the reverse. I was a FA kid and a minority at the top of my class. I was mercilessly bullied at a WASPy local private school. Transferred to a public magnet for HS and had a lovely, wonderful social and intellectual experience. |
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My politically incorrect observation is that some of the kids at my child's independent school clearly need services that they aren't getting.
The teachers keep telling the parents that all kids learn at a different pace, and there's all levels of impulse control or whatever, but the parents are in for a rough ride when they realize it's not normal to still struggle to write your name or read fluently at the end of lower elementary. |
Me too! Very well put and accurate. |
| I went to private and public schools. So did my children. There was no comparison. Private schools were always head and shoulders better. They screen out special needs students, obviously. The faculty are completely accountable, which is less and less the case in public schools. If you can afford it, go private or parochial. |
| AP and IB programs are creating private schools within publics. |
Not if you have enough money for private plus other opportunities. |
| OP -- my politically incorrect post is that if more people went to private and had a brain, D. Trump would not be the Republican nominee. |
Well, Trump himself is a product of private schools, so where does that leave us? |
| Duh. I know Trump went to private. But, he's not counting on private school people to vote for him, he's counting on the un-educated or lowly educated whites to back him. |
| Ok you want politically incorrect? I DON'T think our highly ranked private offers a better education than our public. I DO think the name matters though and will help in college admissions and network throughout life. That's what we're paying for. |
Yikes, how much dating is he doing? |
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I think it's really funny that Parents think they know who is getting bullied for being poor and who isn't. You have no idea what information is circulating through your kid's lives. The only perspectives I value on this board are from people who actually went to the schools we are all talking about (or schools like them). Adults live in adult world and kids live in kid world. My husband hated being the poor kid at a fancy school but his parents never knew how much he suffered from it because he (wait for it) DIDNT TELL THEM. They saw
He had friends and did sports and did well academically, but didn't see the enormous emotional chip building on his shoulder from always being the "poor kid." |
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privates - big group.
I just don't get how they all get lumped in together.
And yes, the one DC goes to provides a better education than our local private -- and is well worth it. I really never get hassled by anyone in real life for sending DC to private; all our friends and neighbors seem fine with it (at least to our face ).
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Here you go. Perhaps someone posted this already, but the reality is that the quality of the education in private schools is only part of what you pay for. For some private schools (e.g., Saint Albans, Georgetown Prep), you are paying for a name brand with national recognition that opens up opportunities for your child beyond just the classroom and college matriculation process. The relationships they forge during the high school years follow them for a lifetime both personally and professionally. For those who think that paying for private school is only about the education, you are thinking very naively. Other schools like Sidwell, Georgetown Day and Maret, while they enjoy an excellent academic reputation, including nationally among colleges, do not, in my opinion foster the lifelong relationships among their alumni that provide any sort of personal/professional benefit beyond getting into college (which though important is only part of the overall equation). |
c'mon, the poors are not equivalent to burglars. Inclusiveness is a good thing ... up to a point of course.
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