OP was specifically saying in the Rockville area. |
| We’re middle class and our DC goes to SJC. We were so fortunate that our DC had a very high HSPT score which them the maximum merit scholarship, and did very well in the audition for the music scholarship which gave us a higher than listed music scholarship amount. It brought the tuition down to below $20k. We’re extremely happy that it worked it so well. We give back to the school by donating a higher amount to the annual fund than we would have normally. |
But people are discussing SJC at length. |
Fair, but I guess the OP should come back and provide more specific criteria because it's really all relative, isn't it? SJC is close to $30k, which may be out of reach if you want to be closer to $20k. And it's in NWDC, which depending on where you are in Rockville could be 15 to 20 miles away, so not exactly within a stones throw. |
All the private schools in Pittsburgh are cheaper than private schools in DC. The most expensive non-Catholic high schools in PGH are $40K or under, while here they are hitting $60K. |
| Teachers have to get paid. And private schools still pay much less than mcps. |
There are not "limited seats" in DMV Catholic high shcools. There are actually more high school seats than Catholic school 8th graders. Perhaps a given student didn't get into exactly the school they wanted, but there absolutely are enough seats at Catholic schools if you are prioritizing a Catholc high school education. |
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Catholics, Seventh-Day Adventists, and the Amish have solved relatively cheap K-8 education. Mormons have figured out how to provide cheap college.
But running inexpensive in-person high schools are very hard. I can only think of three types: part time schools (e.g. University-Model affiliates, a local representative being Coventry Christian in Warrenton, which has students meet three days a week), large home school co-ops (e.g. Classical Cottage Consortium in Winchester, where students meet 1-2 days a week), and just sending your high school-aged kids to the local community college. |