Really? How old are you? You must have graduated from public school if you're an adult, because your EQ is really low. Theres more to success and intelligence (and what I like to call education) than where you get into college. |
Things like the ability to make a compelling argument based on information rather than mere assertion? |
MoCo |
| DH and I both went to public. I didn't see the value of private until the pandemic and watching the public schools scramble. We have several years before our children are elementary age, but we're really considering private. We'll see how this cohort of students catch up as learning goes back in-person. |
This is such a bunch of BS. You are not on the lower end of the income distribution at your preschool with a HHI of $800K. You need a massive, massive reality check. |
Loony tunes |
I don't make $800K but if I did I would consider myself to be below anyone whose grandparents were paying. If that is how op is looking at it she may well be below many of the other parents. |
I’m not sure if OP is the one who replied that they were looking at Jewish day schools, but if they are, sending for middle or high school is less of a viable option. These schools have dual curriculums, meaning that half the day is Hebrew and Judaic studies. The kids begin learning Hebrew in kindergarten, so by the time they are in middle school and high school, you’d be very behind if you didn’t speak Hebrew and, to a lesser but still significant degree, have some Judaic studies background. For this reason, many Jewish parents send their kids to Jewish schools for k-8, for the Jewish environment/background, when tuition is also relatively less expensive, and send public for high school. |
| Public school graduate here and after the past two years I’ll be sending my kids to private, no question. $300k HHI so won’t be a prestigious expensive one but a school that aligns with our family’s values is the most important thing. Option B would be to quit my job and homeschool. No way my kids will be in public school in this area. You make it work, not every school is $30k+, and more and more states are talking about allowing tax dollars to go with the student, which is an obvious policy change after what we’ve seen. |
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I would caution you about private, because it creates a stressful situation to make those monthly tuition payments out of your HHI. Many student have their tuition funded by grandparents.
We were paying $8000 per month for 2 kids in private (10 months/year), and it set us back on our financial goals. We ended up pulling one of our kids out of private and she is now back in public school. |
There is a vast, vast land that exists between a $40k/yr private school and your local public school. This is kind of a laughable scenario really. The average private school in Virginia costs quite less than half that. |
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Not in DC. Sending kids to private for HS. Tuition is $50k/year and HHI is $3.5M.
Was going to stay in our local public (small district; one HS with 500 kids total), but, its limitations are becoming clear. |
Aren't a lot of the cheaper private schools affiliated with a religion, which may not work for everyone. |
| HHI north of 600k and we are about to send our special needs DS to private just for the low teacher to student ratio. DS2 just entered public school but we may enroll him in a private in the future but it is because we believe MCPS's curriculum to have degraded in the last decade (especially with Eureka math). DS2 is an incredibly smart 5 year old, who is able to read at a second grade level, do multiplication in his head, and understand concepts such as infinity and resonance frequencies. He is also a very good communicator. However, he is definitely not challenged at MCPS and pretends to count for the simple addition problems they have him do. |
This indicates nothing. |