Yes. |
So many "top ivy" graduates on this anonymous forum. Very impressive! |
I'm the pp and yes, it worth the extra money to get the extra attention. To a top student, it doesn't matter so much, but for the middle layer that gets lost or ignored, it matters a lot. Think about this, it is not very easy to push a 99% kid to 99.5%, but it is much easier to push a 50% kid to 75% if not higher. |
And so wildly successful, living such a decadent life, that they troll private school message boards during the workday. ![]() |
Because they are wealthy enough so they don't need to work |
I also went to Harvard. I found the private school kids to be well read, well organized, and a year older. Many were very hard workers. They had had, however, a lot of handholding to get where they were. The scary smart kids( junior Phi Beta Kappa, summa grads, Putnam winners etc.), were disproportionately public school kids. They had gotten to Harvard with much less handholding, a testament to their superbrains. |
^^I work, but I also get a lunch break. It keeps me in touch with John Q. Public. |
You're actually making yourself look bad here ... what do YOU do all day? |
This is just revealing your own bias -- I knew 'scary smart' kids from both private and public at Harvard. Come on. |
I went to an Ivy (but apparently, one that DCUM would call a "bottom Ivy" as it is hardly ever mentioned here?). By far, the private school kids were the ones better prepared for that kind of environment. They had read more and been better taught to think analytically in a challenging situation. Across the board, the private school grads had had more AP class offerings, better sports teams, better music programs, etc. I worked my ass off in public high school to get where I was, and I thought I had a decent amount of preparation, but I had a LOT of catching up to do during my freshman year. |
I think it's highly unlikely that, on the whole, public school kids are better-prepared at "elite" colleges than private school kids, or vice versa.
That said, to the extent I'm inclined to generalize at all, my sense is that the public school kids may initially adapt better than private school kids to the intro-level classes with hundreds of students, while private school kids may initially adapt better with the smaller, seminar-style classes. But the key word is initially, because if you're at a top college then the skill set to adapt quickly likely exists already and by the end of four years it's all a wash IMO. |
We are in-boundary for a top-rated public elementary school. Most of our neighbors send their kids there. We send our kids to a private school nearby (though not nearly as close as the public school) for a few reasons --
1 - We toured the private school and the public school a few different times, and each time found the teacher engagement, classroom materials, and principals to be far superior at the private school. 2 - Wanted to avoid the frequent standardized testing and homework in our public school. (We know about this from our neighbors who have kids there.) 3 - We can afford it (and we realize we are lucky to be able to do so) and this seems like a good investment of our money. |
But if the difference is "only" (because everything is relative) $10-15k, the non-salary benefits may make a huge difference. At our school for example, faculty parents get half tuition reduction for their kids, and free extended day care. That's an extra $16k or so per kid. THey are eligible for additional financial aid as well. I often wonder how teachers without kids or those who choose not to send their kids to the school feel about this. |
Not sure what you mean by "top student" but wanted to add that private school is worth it for my super smart, quiet, but not are working kid. They ALL get a lot of individualized attention that helps them develop their strengths and address their weaknesses. |
We do this for our two kids & perhaps it's the same private if everyone buses? I wanted to love our top ranked public school and if I had looked at it in a vacuum, it would have been fine, but after comparing it to the private, I wanted the smaller classes, more resources and ability to work with different levels of learning, the incredible art & music resources, etc. I'm not sure how to articulate it without sounding completely snobby, but at our private, all of the teachers & staff are 100% committed & feel proud to be there. There's no grumbling about things or bureaucracy to deal with.
Also, even though we live far away from the school, there is a really nice community of neighborhood families who attend. Finally, because the screening process for new kids is rigorous, it's unlikely you'll end up with a child who will really distract the class & suck up all of the teacher's time. In a class of 24-26 kids, one child like that could ruin the year for the others. |