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Montgomery County Public Schools (MCPS)
Reply to "If you can afford it why wouldn’t you switch your kids to private with all the terrible things going on"
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]People vastly underestimate the social and emotional benefits of going to school with kids in their neighborhood/community. The value of going to school with the same cohort over the years (especially in large schools where you have many options for friend groups) is enormous. Private school kids may get a better education but many of them don't have the rich community that public school kids do. There's very little running to neighbors' houses and hanging out, biking together, spending long stretches together wandering through the neighborhood. In my Bethesda neighborhood, very few of the private school kids have this, or just with or or two kids. The kids in MCPS have been together since they were in elementary school and have strong social bonds. Having a pack of friends from childhood through high school is a strong source of emotional health and stability and there is a huge amount of research on this. It's also what makes childhood and adolescence special. I don't see this with private school kids anywhere near as close as it with local publics. [/quote] Again. If your child is struggling in school most likely they are struggling elsewhere. They can make and keep friends in the neighborhood just fine. They can’t if they can’t function in school and MCPS doesn’t address it properly. So that’s the argument for private some have. [/quote] still waiting for someone to explain how a private school can better address something like functioning in school? Do they actually have more teachers and specialized staff that can address these needs? Are these staff paid well or competitively enough to stay for a long time in the private setting? Or are you paying for the exclusivity of keeping out the riff raff kids so your child is less distracted? I went to parochial school in a different state and there were no special ed students or extra staff that could have even assisted in the role that a paraeducator would have in public school. This was 30+ years ago so I get that times have changed, but I am really curious about the OP's goal here? Does the average private school have the staff and capacity to assist high needs kids with IEPs or other issues actually learn better? [/quote] Private schools, unless specialized, are not going to provide adequate accommodations for some students - who need one-on-one aids, who can’t work at or near grade level, etc. But a lot of kids with LDs can be accommodated in a class of 12-15 students in a way they can’t be in a class of 28-32 students. One big benefit of private school is smaller classes and thereby fewer distractions for kids whose IEP/504 is for ADHD or level 1 autism or sensory sensitivities etc. [/quote]
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