We purposely picked an urban school over a college setting schools for K-12 private. If they want that, they can choose it for college. We found that the difference between a good public and good private were little in high school, more pronounced in elementary school. Class sizes and attention from teacher constantly smaller in private; small number of kids per grade an get much over time, even despite a few intakes to get from 40 to 130 per grade. |
can you stipulate what city you are in? many of us are familiar with various options all over the county. For example, if you said Palo Alto or NYC I would have a different impression than Sidwell and a different impression of north Chicago. |
| country |
I understand you are curious. I really didn’t want to out myself, and was enjoying a more hypothetical discussion. I don’t think the specific school matters. |
| What matters is whether your child likes the school and is excited to be there, make friends and learn. If a child comes from an educated family, there is almost no way he or she will fail. Do what is best for your child and don’t feel bad! |
Is this the one where the "smart" girl is later found working at Whole Foods? Sadly, she was right when she said "Maybe I was just smart, at my school, but I wasn't actually smart-smart." That is most frequently the case. Awful publics leave students soooooo far behind. Unless a kid has been a crazy voracious reader for 10 years and dual enrolled at the local college, they can't hang with smart peers at a strong university. It's just a fact. 13 years of crappy education just leaves too many holes in your education. There was another This American Life on inner-city college admissions. The guidance counselor at a Brooklyn public school got his "smartest" student into Williams, I think, on a full ride. She flunked out, went home, went to community college to be a nurse. |
| (Aside-OP, funny coincidence! This was in White Hall “it’s better on top” in 97). |
For the special ed kids, it looked great. For my ADHD kid, having the special ed kids was one more unneeded distraction. (There were 4 autistic kids in his small 32 person classroom.) |
I don’t know if anyone else has seen Foxcroft’s (swanky boarding school in va) dorm rooms but they are nothing special at all. Just cinderblock walls and two beds in a room. |
Really? How entitled of you.
I’ll bet that your kid was the distraction to everyone ! |
NP, but doesn't it have to be Alexandria? OP said it was close-in, and North Arlington and McLean schools are all pretty good, so... |
+1000 Wonderful post. |
Former neighbors of ours managed to put their kid in a 99% White private school in Georgia. It’s weird. https://veritassavannah.org/support-veritas/ |
| The facilities at my private school (not in DC) are worse than in public schools. Most private schools in this other urban area of VA were very bare bones. The main reason to be there was to be away from the behavior problems at public school. |
I looked up that school and it’s 90% white. I’m not saying that’s great but I could give you a list pages and pages and pages long of private schools in the north that have similar demographics so please don’t act like the South is the only part of the country with racial imbalance. |