| Teacher quality. Maybe they are able to excel at their jobs because they have a manageable course load and class size. But they provide detailed feedback, offer regular one-on-one meetings, often have doctorates (in their specialty, not EDD), and execute a rigorous and interesting curriculum. |
You sound awful to me and my kid has no special needs. |
Oh, knock it off. Your moral superiority is tiresome. The classroom episodes the PP wrote about are extreme, not minor and not ideal for anyone involved. |
Alas, he was light-years away, planning out the interstellar expansion of warring nations. (I used to do the same thing, only in more of a fantasy world context. I often doodle while paying attention, but any time the High King's army was ambushing the orcish horde, I wouldn't be following along with Algebra I.) |
It does seem a bit odd to have one the day of Halloween but having one the day after could solve a lot of problems. |
Same. I never volunteer where my kid goes to school, but when I asked, I answer. And then sometimes I get a sniff and “well, it was important to us to support public schools…” Of course, those people are inevitably zoned for a much better public school than we are, and have houses that cost 3x as much. But they do love to make it clear that they could afford private school, they just find it morally inferior. Whatever. |
| Strong peer group: a few to no disruptive kids per grade; many parents with PhDs and or other accomplishments. Excellent academics. I don’t have to worry about MS & HS placement. The food in the cafeteria is decent, way better than in public. The teachers and administration always reply the same day, and typically within a couple of hours. Best of all, our kids love their school and go happily every day. |
+1. Never thought I would say this, but single sex education is better, esp. in lower and middle school. And what the others are saying, no disruptive behavior, which in part is helped by the single sex structure. |
Not true at our private. No absences allowed for vacationing, and the administration or teachers will email to remind you of this nicely if you break the rule. Ask me how I know. |
| We moved my son into private in 6th grade. We really wanted to stick with public for various reasons, but it was so chaotic. We just had our first parent teacher conference and the difference was staggering, and if anything it has totally infuriated us that every kid doesn't have access to the kind of attention and academic instruction that he is getting now. I am appalled. |
| I have two kids with anxiety and really appreciate the calmer setting of private school compared to our prior experience in public. No overcrowding, no fights and other disruptions, bathrooms with soap and toilet paper, more freedom and independence for students, feeling seen and known rather than lost in a crowd, flexible lunch seating options, time outside in nature rather than locked in a high security building with no fresh air or sunlight. It’s just a much less intense and stressful experience, which helps a lot with managing anxiety. |
This And then when I see groups of kids out in public, from nearby public schools, my decision is solidified. |
| Very small classes, wonderful community |
You must be in MD. Privates are only required to have 168 instructional days versus the 180 required of public schools. Any day kids are on campus counts as an instructional day so they fudge it even more with half days, assemblies, student led conferences and such. |
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Small class sizes
Amazing facilities both academic and athletic Focus on writing PE every day and recess twice a day (in lower school now) Super responsive teachers Everyone at school knows my kids (I went to pick one up sick two weeks ago and multiple people I didn't know all told her by name that they hoped she'd feel better soon) Great community of parentss Exposure to engineering classes since first grade Really cool field trips and experiences The fact that my kids did in-person school starting August 2020 certainly didn't hurt either, although obviously I hope to never go through something like COVID again |