Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP. I'm sorry, I didn't mean to offend by bringing up income. I didn't go to private school (obviously) and I formed that impression of typical class dynamics from a different post on this forum. I'd still value recs for schools with a nerdy, quirky vibe.
There’s your mistake. Don’t form your opinions on much, but particularly class dynamics, from posts on the forum.
At 400k, you will be in the middle 50% of income at every school in the DC area, except *maybe* Madeira and Foxcroft. You wouldn’t even be the “poorest” full pay boarding family in the NE boarding schools. And these schools aren’t status symbol obsessed like this board. It will be the same scene, or maybe slightly improved, as UMC public’s when it comes to material possessions.
Not true at the Big3. We have kids at two of them and we are definitely, 100% in the bottom quartile of income with a HHI of $400K.
So much so that we receive aid. So clearly the schools themselves agree that we are in their lower income bracket. I know that people think that the aid famlies at these school are making $75K a year but no, most of us are making $200-400K.
We are the "poor" (who are not poor by any other standard).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP. I'm sorry, I didn't mean to offend by bringing up income. I didn't go to private school (obviously) and I formed that impression of typical class dynamics from a different post on this forum. I'd still value recs for schools with a nerdy, quirky vibe.
There’s your mistake. Don’t form your opinions on much, but particularly class dynamics, from posts on the forum.
At 400k, you will be in the middle 50% of income at every school in the DC area, except *maybe* Madeira and Foxcroft. You wouldn’t even be the “poorest” full pay boarding family in the NE boarding schools. And these schools aren’t status symbol obsessed like this board. It will be the same scene, or maybe slightly improved, as UMC public’s when it comes to material possessions.
Not true at the Big3. We have kids at two of them and we are definitely, 100% in the bottom quartile of income with a HHI of $400K.
So much so that we receive aid. So clearly the schools themselves agree that we are in their lower income bracket. I know that people think that the aid famlies at these school are making $75K a year but no, most of us are making $200-400K.
We are the "poor" (who are not poor by any other standard).
Anonymous wrote:OP. I'm sorry, I didn't mean to offend by bringing up income. I didn't go to private school (obviously) and I formed that impression of typical class dynamics from a different post on this forum. I'd still value recs for schools with a nerdy, quirky vibe.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP. I'm sorry, I didn't mean to offend by bringing up income. I didn't go to private school (obviously) and I formed that impression of typical class dynamics from a different post on this forum. I'd still value recs for schools with a nerdy, quirky vibe.
There’s your mistake. Don’t form your opinions on much, but particularly class dynamics, from posts on the forum.
At 400k, you will be in the middle 50% of income at every school in the DC area, except *maybe* Madeira and Foxcroft. You wouldn’t even be the “poorest” full pay boarding family in the NE boarding schools. And these schools aren’t status symbol obsessed like this board. It will be the same scene, or maybe slightly improved, as UMC public’s when it comes to material possessions.
Anonymous wrote:None of the private schools in the DMV are for the super-rich. That happens more in NYC, LA, etc. You would fit in at any of them.
Anonymous wrote:OP. I'm sorry, I didn't mean to offend by bringing up income. I didn't go to private school (obviously) and I formed that impression of typical class dynamics from a different post on this forum. I'd still value recs for schools with a nerdy, quirky vibe.
Anonymous wrote:Sorry if this has been asked before and I couldn't find it. We're in Arlington and very new to considering private school, because public isn't rigorous enough. We're poor by private school standards (upper 400s HHI), and I hate the thought of my daughters feeling "less than" or wanting designer clothes/cars/etc. to fit in. Catholic school wouldn't be ideal, because I think one of my kids is gay. Are there any schools you'd recommend with a nerdy, quirky, non-1%ter dominated vibe? Or resources you'd recommend for doing my own research? Thank you!