Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We have one in both. There are pros and cons to both public and private. A lot depends on the kid and his needs. Some kids need a smaller environment to thrive. Others don’t and benefit from the broader course selection in public. Only you and your child can answer which is the better fit.
I’ve never heard of a broader course selection in public. The private school where your DC is must be a very small school if it has fewer courses than public. Our private has many more courses to choose from than any public school in the county.
You clearly haven’t looked at the course options of schools like Whitman. No private school can match it.
Anonymous wrote:I would send your child to the private for one year and switch back to public if you don't like it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We have one in both. There are pros and cons to both public and private. A lot depends on the kid and his needs. Some kids need a smaller environment to thrive. Others don’t and benefit from the broader course selection in public. Only you and your child can answer which is the better fit.
I’ve never heard of a broader course selection in public. The private school where your DC is must be a very small school if it has fewer courses than public. Our private has many more courses to choose from than any public school in the county.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We have one in both. There are pros and cons to both public and private. A lot depends on the kid and his needs. Some kids need a smaller environment to thrive. Others don’t and benefit from the broader course selection in public. Only you and your child can answer which is the better fit.
I’ve never heard of a broader course selection in public. The private school where your DC is must be a very small school if it has fewer courses than public. Our private has many more courses to choose from than any public school in the county.
Anonymous wrote:We have one in both. There are pros and cons to both public and private. A lot depends on the kid and his needs. Some kids need a smaller environment to thrive. Others don’t and benefit from the broader course selection in public. Only you and your child can answer which is the better fit.
Anonymous wrote:We told our DC the choice was his, and reminded him that if he chose private and ultimately didn't like it, he could always transfer to JR (where 9th grade is not the strong suit anyway). On the other hand, if he passed up this chance and went to JR and didn't like it, he had no other options but to stick it out.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We didn’t get our first /second choice. The third choice son did get in is a lovely school but is smaller and … was always a back up. Money is not the issue but I am wondering if our public is going to be a better fit and it’s really hard to tell. We are inbound for Jackson Reed. We also could go to the new MacArthur high school supposedly & are exploring. It’s obvious this section is looked at by both public and private parents making decisions this week. Curious if anyone else is in our position and how that’s going.
I think it depends on the kid. My kid would get eating alive. Too big for her.
Anonymous wrote:We didn’t get our first /second choice. The third choice son did get in is a lovely school but is smaller and … was always a back up. Money is not the issue but I am wondering if our public is going to be a better fit and it’s really hard to tell. We are inbound for Jackson Reed. We also could go to the new MacArthur high school supposedly & are exploring. It’s obvious this section is looked at by both public and private parents making decisions this week. Curious if anyone else is in our position and how that’s going.