Agree. I’m the PP and was mainly referring to the general classes and electives everyone has to take. The AP classes and actual honors classes are filled with kids there to learn. |
| We've done a small private and a large public, and much preferred the public. There are too many opportunities for bullying in private schools and kids are stuck with the same children for 8/4 or 12 years. My older children recommended we not send the younger ones to private. |
This has not exactly been our experience. My DD's classes still have those "twice exceptional" kids who are still really disruptive and annoying and can't be disciplined. |
Wut |
There’s so many important benefits that have nothing to do with college. |
cornROWS (SMDH0 |
Omg. Funny |
What was so challenging for you to understand here? |
sorry.. was typing without thinking
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| At my niece and nephew's Catholic school, the boys can't have hair that touches the collar of their uniform and no one can dye their hair an unnatural color. |
Ok, this just made me laugh a bit at the hypocrisy. So let me get this straight PP ... you want your child to be kind but do not hesitate to deal in generalizations and unkind comments about people you do not even know? Your opinion, PP, is not one that carries much weight if you ask me. |
Perhaps not in the DC area but this is flatly untrue in some districts in this country. |
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I have kids in both private and public.
Some advantages of private: option for religious or same sex environment, smaller classes, in some districts more diversity (surprisingly!), more free periods during the day when kids are encouraged to visit their teachers or have a study hall, option to leave early for specific extracurriculars (for example, my kid danced at a pre pro company and we were given the leeway to leave in a way a public would not), uniforms, curated student population and specifically, curated student parents, much better facilities both indoor and sports/fields, extracurriculars as part of the school day, amazing field trips including overnights. Sports at the lower/middle school ages were a part of the school day - not need to drive all around getting a kid to practice. I strongly believe privates on average offer better study/organizational skills training and better writing instruction. (I haven’t found this to be true for math.) Public: better AP selections (this will depend on the school), bigger grade and class sizes (for one kid, this was a benefit - he didn’t thrive in a smaller environment), better music program (this again will depend on the district but absolutely the case for us), better accommodations for special needs (speech therapy, ADHD, hearing). |
| They have to justify that they are spending $30,000 a year. We recently switched from private to public because the private couldn’t meet the needs of my SN daughter. Both of my kids are thriving in public and we are fortunate that our public schools are best in class. We don’t live in DMV. |
My kids are not SN. I think most people would agree that public is better for SN, unless it is an SN-specific private. That said, I do not know why OP is asking this question. If she cannot afford private then what is the point? It would be like me asking if flying in private jets is really all that compared to flying commercial. |