Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You are missing all the kids who graduate from from public school and go to college and do great with no transition issues at all.
Do you actually read it? I'm talking about MY local public school, and not every other public school in America!
Your post is really long, but you don't bother to mention the school system and you don't mention the school.
So, yes, feel free to send your own children to private school, but recognize that there are many graduates of local public school system who continue to excel at many colleges and universities. My freshman has already been told that he can graduate in three years if he chooses, based on his AP scores, placement tests, and first semester performance.
Yes of course there are many graduates of local public schools who continue to excel at many colleges and universities -- I am one of them. I am only speaking about the school my children would have to go to which is not the school I went to.
Then really, what is the point of your post? Two anecdotes about two specific kids at one specific school that an anonymous stranger is not choosing for your kids. Ok.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You are missing all the kids who graduate from from public school and go to college and do great with no transition issues at all.
Do you actually read it? I'm talking about MY local public school, and not every other public school in America!
Your post is really long, but you don't bother to mention the school system and you don't mention the school.
So, yes, feel free to send your own children to private school, but recognize that there are many graduates of local public school system who continue to excel at many colleges and universities. My freshman has already been told that he can graduate in three years if he chooses, based on his AP scores, placement tests, and first semester performance.
Yes of course there are many graduates of local public schools who continue to excel at many colleges and universities -- I am one of them. I am only speaking about the school my children would have to go to which is not the school I went to.
Then really, what is the point of your post? Two anecdotes about two specific kids at one specific school that an anonymous stranger is not choosing for your kids. Ok.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You are missing all the kids who graduate from from public school and go to college and do great with no transition issues at all.
Do you actually read it? I'm talking about MY local public school, and not every other public school in America!
Your post is really long, but you don't bother to mention the school system and you don't mention the school.
So, yes, feel free to send your own children to private school, but recognize that there are many graduates of local public school system who continue to excel at many colleges and universities. My freshman has already been told that he can graduate in three years if he chooses, based on his AP scores, placement tests, and first semester performance.
Yes of course there are many graduates of local public schools who continue to excel at many colleges and universities -- I am one of them. I am only speaking about the school my children would have to go to which is not the school I went to.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:some kids can fall through the cracks. sounds like these two may have done just that.
choose private if it is best for your family; but it is really not in your interest or attractive to other people to slam public schools.
People need to get out of their feelings. Unless they are the one designing the public school curriculum its not a personal jab. All of you pro public school people at any cost are beyond ridiculous. To be clear I am a public school grad and my kids go to public school. However, I dont get my panties in a bunch when people say they dont think public schools are good -- that's their opinion and they are entitled to it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It still sounds like you just have two anecdotes. Do more research. Look at average SAT scores, AP scores. Consider whether, even in this worst case, taking a few remedial classes is worth the hundreds of thousands of dollars you'd save over private school.
Wow, so the money is more important than making sure my children are well prepared? A few remedial class is NOT a good thing.
Anonymous wrote:some kids can fall through the cracks. sounds like these two may have done just that.
choose private if it is best for your family; but it is really not in your interest or attractive to other people to slam public schools.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You are missing all the kids who graduate from from public school and go to college and do great with no transition issues at all.
Do you actually read it? I'm talking about MY local public school, and not every other public school in America!
Your post is really long, but you don't bother to mention the school system and you don't mention the school.
So, yes, feel free to send your own children to private school, but recognize that there are many graduates of local public school system who continue to excel at many colleges and universities. My freshman has already been told that he can graduate in three years if he chooses, based on his AP scores, placement tests, and first semester performance.
Anonymous wrote:It still sounds like you just have two anecdotes. Do more research. Look at average SAT scores, AP scores. Consider whether, even in this worst case, taking a few remedial classes is worth the hundreds of thousands of dollars you'd save over private school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You are missing all the kids who graduate from from public school and go to college and do great with no transition issues at all.
Do you actually read it? I'm talking about MY local public school, and not every other public school in America!
Anonymous wrote:You are missing all the kids who graduate from from public school and go to college and do great with no transition issues at all.