Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. Let's say I talk to my child, and that we agree on sending him to private next year because we don't want the tuition to burn for next year.
Can he still see the FCPS AAP for the first three weeks of semester next year, so that at least he has an idea of what the school is like there. Is there any downside of him being at FCPS AAP for the first three weeks, given he knows he will switch to private for the rest of the year, and he may consider the AAP for the 6th grade?
It's a terrible idea. What if he hates it? There's no point to going to a school for 2 weeks only. Even worse, what if he loves it and makes a best friend? Then he would leave.
More likely, he would not even start to fit in, since his time is so short. So it would just be a miserable useless experience.
Pick a school and send him there.
Look, I don't know why anyone here insisting on not understanding. I already mentioned that he wants to have a choice, and this plan excites him. He does not have any attachment yet to either private or the FCPS AAP center. No friends. No familiarity. He wants to see both. If he likes AAP for the first 3 weeks, that's great information for him and he can continue. If he hates it, great info for him so he can continue with private for the rest of the year.
He has never been in a classroom with more than 15 kids, or at any public school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. Let's say I talk to my child, and that we agree on sending him to private next year because we don't want the tuition to burn for next year.
Can he still see the FCPS AAP for the first three weeks of semester next year, so that at least he has an idea of what the school is like there. Is there any downside of him being at FCPS AAP for the first three weeks, given he knows he will switch to private for the rest of the year, and he may consider the AAP for the 6th grade?
It's a terrible idea. What if he hates it? There's no point to going to a school for 2 weeks only. Even worse, what if he loves it and makes a best friend? Then he would leave.
More likely, he would not even start to fit in, since his time is so short. So it would just be a miserable useless experience.
Pick a school and send him there.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. Let's say I talk to my child, and that we agree on sending him to private next year because we don't want the tuition to burn for next year.
Can he still see the FCPS AAP for the first three weeks of semester next year, so that at least he has an idea of what the school is like there. Is there any downside of him being at FCPS AAP for the first three weeks, given he knows he will switch to private for the rest of the year, and he may consider the AAP for the 6th grade?
Anonymous wrote:I am going to agree that this is a ridiculous idea. The first few weeks at any FCPS ES is going to be focused on getting back into the routine, assessments, and review. It is not going to give a child time to figure out much of what is happening at the school or to get to know peers, extra curricular activities, or much of anything.
Two days at a private school is going to be a rinse and repeat of the FCPS experience but with even less time and probably little real exposure to the kids or what a school day looks like. And you might be paying $8,000-$50,000 for a year of tuition, dependent on the school, for 2 days?
Never mind the fact that your child's placement in the AAP class might mean that another child is not Principal placed into the class because you want to “try out FCPS.”
Choose a school and go there.
Anonymous wrote:Can't you come do a shadow day at private this year? Even if you are flying across the globe to do it, that would be cheaper. And a shadow day is how everybody else tests out a private school, vs enrolling.
I also don't think your kid will know much about the school from just a few weeks. Kids are changeable, the first weeks are intro, etc.
Anonymous wrote:You can withdraw and return to public school as much as you want. An AAP designation stays with a child through 8th grade. Your plan is ridiculous and disruptive for your child and the other kids in the public class, where groups will be set in the first few weeks.
Anonymous wrote:This is a ridiculous plan.
With that said, once you pass the binding date for tuition, you are going to be in the hook for that private school tuition for the entire year, even if you end up putting him in public school.