Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I've noticed a number of young professionals that live in gentrifying neighborhoods are sending their kids to chartered schools. I'm curious whether the top charters (LAMB, Ling, MV) are populated by kids of high income earners. Is this a good way to avoid bad public schools without paying for private school? [b]Can your kids get a private school education at a chartered school?
I have this same question, specifically, as it relates to Basis and Latin.
Yes this is how high SES households get cheaper housing but better schools.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I've noticed a number of young professionals that live in gentrifying neighborhoods are sending their kids to chartered schools. I'm curious whether the top charters (LAMB, Ling, MV) are populated by kids of high income earners. Is this a good way to avoid bad public schools without paying for private school? [b]Can your kids get a private school education at a chartered school?
I have this same question, specifically, as it relates to Basis and Latin.
Anonymous wrote:I've noticed a number of young professionals that live in gentrifying neighborhoods are sending their kids to chartered schools. I'm curious whether the top charters (LAMB, Ling, MV) are populated by kids of high income earners. Is this a good way to avoid bad public schools without paying for private school? [b]Can your kids get a private school education at a chartered school?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I've noticed a number of young professionals that live in gentrifying neighborhoods are sending their kids to chartered schools. I'm curious whether the top charters (LAMB, Ling, MV) are populated by kids of high income earners. Is this a good way to avoid bad public schools without paying for private school? Can your kids get a private school education at a chartered school?
Firstly, I don't even know what your first sentence means. "I've noticed"? Where did you notice this? "young professional"? huh? And the bolded are not the top charters.
Anonymous wrote:I've noticed a number of young professionals that live in gentrifying neighborhoods are sending their kids to chartered schools. I'm curious whether the top charters (LAMB, Ling, MV) are populated by kids of high income earners. Is this a good way to avoid bad public schools without paying for private school? Can your kids get a private school education at a chartered school?
Anonymous wrote:There is no charter school that will provide the kind sort of responsiveness as a private school, perfectly balanced classrooms or the same level of food service and athletic / recess.
A few may provide an equal educational experience. They are al required to be inclusive with regard to students with disabilities.
All will provide a more “real world” experience with all the diversity that brings.