Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If the public schools weren’t failing our kids, then maybe it wouldn’t be worth it, but Langley solves for the faults in the public school right now. We started sending our kids to Langley before the pandemic when the teacher couldn’t control the unruly kids in the classroom (in AAP) and we were told that there was nothing we could do about it. And then we now have watched the public school fail in the pandemic (Langley was open the whole time), fail in class sizes (23-26 kids is not an acceptable class size to me in 1st grade with one teacher), and fail to give kids the emotional and academic support they need. Langley has a lot of resources and they are able make it so you don’t have to worry about things like that. At back to school night, Langley noted that they have their biggest student body size ever and the highest retention rate ever (I think it was 96%). Is it perfect? No. But I read somewhere on this board that the difference is like dealing with the DMV vs returning something at Nordstrom’s - if everything goes well, then the DMV isn’t that bad, but the second something goes wrong, then you want better customer service and you won’t get that at public school. But “worth” is a very very personal question.
Is there actually good academic support at Langley? My child has ADHD and is medicated but still needs some supports in elementary.
Anonymous wrote:Have you searched for the billion other threads on this topic?
Anonymous wrote:If the public schools weren’t failing our kids, then maybe it wouldn’t be worth it, but Langley solves for the faults in the public school right now. We started sending our kids to Langley before the pandemic when the teacher couldn’t control the unruly kids in the classroom (in AAP) and we were told that there was nothing we could do about it. And then we now have watched the public school fail in the pandemic (Langley was open the whole time), fail in class sizes (23-26 kids is not an acceptable class size to me in 1st grade with one teacher), and fail to give kids the emotional and academic support they need. Langley has a lot of resources and they are able make it so you don’t have to worry about things like that. At back to school night, Langley noted that they have their biggest student body size ever and the highest retention rate ever (I think it was 96%). Is it perfect? No. But I read somewhere on this board that the difference is like dealing with the DMV vs returning something at Nordstrom’s - if everything goes well, then the DMV isn’t that bad, but the second something goes wrong, then you want better customer service and you won’t get that at public school. But “worth” is a very very personal question.
Anonymous wrote:Worth it is all relative - what are you solving for? We moved our kids to private during covid to be in school. That was worth it. We've stayed for the smaller class sizes, but I'm not thrilled with the school socially so we might pivot the kids back to public.
Anonymous wrote:If the public schools weren’t failing our kids, then maybe it wouldn’t be worth it, but Langley solves for the faults in the public school right now. We started sending our kids to Langley before the pandemic when the teacher couldn’t control the unruly kids in the classroom (in AAP) and we were told that there was nothing we could do about it. And then we now have watched the public school fail in the pandemic (Langley was open the whole time), fail in class sizes (23-26 kids is not an acceptable class size to me in 1st grade with one teacher), and fail to give kids the emotional and academic support they need. Langley has a lot of resources and they are able make it so you don’t have to worry about things like that. At back to school night, Langley noted that they have their biggest student body size ever and the highest retention rate ever (I think it was 96%). Is it perfect? No. But I read somewhere on this board that the difference is like dealing with the DMV vs returning something at Nordstrom’s - if everything goes well, then the DMV isn’t that bad, but the second something goes wrong, then you want better customer service and you won’t get that at public school. But “worth” is a very very personal question.