Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is an odd question, but I do not know where else to ask it.
If you live in a great public school and/or have access to stellar private schools then why would you send your kids to a second-tier NE boarding school? This probably applies more to people up North than down here because people down here do not seem to send their kids to boarding school as much or if they do they do five day boarding at one of the local boarding schools which I can kind of understand. I can understand sending your kids who is really smart to Andover and Exeter because they have excellent resources and have a good track record at top colleges, but laying down $50,000 for your kid to go to Berkshire or Brooks, I am really not so sure especially if it doesn't help them college wise. What's the deal?
And that everyone, is all I need to read, to lose interest completely. That is not an auto-correct issue, its just bad grammar!
Anonymous wrote:After the whole St. Paul's thing I'd be hesitant to send my DD to a school like that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is an odd question, but I do not know where else to ask it.
If you live in a great public school and/or have access to stellar private schools then why would you send your kids to a second-tier NE boarding school? This probably applies more to people up North than down here because people down here do not seem to send their kids to boarding school as much or if they do they do five day boarding at one of the local boarding schools which I can kind of understand. I can understand sending your kids who is really smart to Andover and Exeter because they have excellent resources and have a good track record at top colleges, but laying down $50,000 for your kid to go to Berkshire or Brooks, I am really not so sure especially if it doesn't help them college wise. What's the deal?
And that everyone, is all I need to read, to lose interest completely. That is not an auto-correct issue, its just bad grammar!
Anonymous wrote:This is an odd question, but I do not know where else to ask it.
If you live in a great public school and/or have access to stellar private schools then why would you send your kids to a second-tier NE boarding school? This probably applies more to people up North than down here because people down here do not seem to send their kids to boarding school as much or if they do they do five day boarding at one of the local boarding schools which I can kind of understand. I can understand sending your kids who is really smart to Andover and Exeter because they have excellent resources and have a good track record at top colleges, but laying down $50,000 for your kid to go to Berkshire or Brooks, I am really not so sure especially if it doesn't help them college wise. What's the deal?
Anonymous wrote:Some kids need to get away from home. I know one kid who really turned around at boarding school.