Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why is it only OP is allowed to state where her DD got in but the other parent is not?
Because OP paid for private school. She's better than public school parents and is annoyed that those lowly public school kids might have achievements similar to her kid.
Your public school kids may get into the same colleges, but they will always lack the private school je ne sais quoi.
It's called "I don't know what" because nobody's exactly sure what IT is or if it's possible to have more or less of IT. But mainly IT comes down to good luck in life, confidence, and money. Luck is influenceable but random, confidence can be learned and is free. Having money is a fact.
So basically je sais what the quoi is. It's being rich. Private school = rich.
So, the post above kinda sums it up. Your public school kids may get into the same colleges, but they'll never be rich.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why is it only OP is allowed to state where her DD got in but the other parent is not?
Because OP paid for private school. She's better than public school parents and is annoyed that those lowly public school kids might have achievements similar to her kid.
Your public school kids may get into the same colleges, but they will always lack the private school je ne sais quoi.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why is it only OP is allowed to state where her DD got in but the other parent is not?
Because OP paid for private school. She's better than public school parents and is annoyed that those lowly public school kids might have achievements similar to her kid.
Your public school kids may get into the same colleges, but they will always lack the private school je ne sais quoi.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why is it only OP is allowed to state where her DD got in but the other parent is not?
Because OP paid for private school. She's better than public school parents and is annoyed that those lowly public school kids might have achievements similar to her kid.
Your public school kids may get into the same colleges, but they will always lack the private school je ne sais quoi.
Whenever people say things like this it’s always so hilarious to me. My best friend went to very exclusive privates in NYC from K-12 and I adore her but she is one of the most socially awkward people I know, knows nothing about food, wine, travel, etc. If your kid is socially adept and/or interested in culture, it doesn’t matter where they go to school. Likewise if they’re a wallflower.
Private school je ne sais quoi has nothing to do with interest in culture. It's just a certain "it" factor, and really, only private alums pick up on it. Not really something a public school alum is going to be truly perceptive of.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Any elegant comeback ideas for when a parent highlights their public school child got into the same college(s) as our private school daughter? The passive-aggressive point they are trying to make is that we wasted our money on private school tuition and we should have just stayed in the public system and would have ended up at the same place.So far, I've been using variations of "Good for you/them!"
I’m a public school educated person that went to a fancy private college and I can tell you there’s a big difference between the private school kids and the public school kids. Just knowing that should be enough for you - the culture, the education, the writing style, etc…
There is a reason all of my friends that went to public schools now send their kids to private schools…
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why is it only OP is allowed to state where her DD got in but the other parent is not?
Because OP paid for private school. She's better than public school parents and is annoyed that those lowly public school kids might have achievements similar to her kid.
Your public school kids may get into the same colleges, but they will always lack the private school je ne sais quoi.
Whenever people say things like this it’s always so hilarious to me. My best friend went to very exclusive privates in NYC from K-12 and I adore her but she is one of the most socially awkward people I know, knows nothing about food, wine, travel, etc. If your kid is socially adept and/or interested in culture, it doesn’t matter where they go to school. Likewise if they’re a wallflower.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why is it only OP is allowed to state where her DD got in but the other parent is not?
Because OP paid for private school. She's better than public school parents and is annoyed that those lowly public school kids might have achievements similar to her kid.
Your public school kids may get into the same colleges, but they will always lack the private school je ne sais quoi.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are they saying "well my kid went to Public HS and is going to Same Ivy" or are they just...sharing where their kid got it?
This. If someone is saying "Well Larla is also going to Yale and that's without having blown 300k on private tuition" then by all means say "Congratulations but I have no regrets about private school because it was the learning environment we thought would best prepare our kids for college and beyond." Like just don't engage on the premise that private school is about getting into top colleges (especially because this is not a good reason to send kids to private schools!).
But I suspect that what is actually happening is that OP knows people who are just sharing the good news of their kid getting into top schools and OP is mentally doing the math on how those kids were able to do that without spending money on private school tuition and feeling like a chump and wants to one-up these people somehow as an act of defensiveness. This is all about OP's insecurities and nothing to do with the other people. As I said, sending your kids to private just to get into highly competitive colleges is a fool's errand -- it doesn't always work out that way and it's way too much money to view as an investment in a specific outcome. You have to choose private for it's intrinsic qualities and accept that college is going to work out the way it works out -- not every kid is Ivy League material even at very competitive private HSs.
+1
The odds are like one in a million for two private and public parents in the same social orbit to both have same year kids admitted to Yale. OP’s hypothetical is going to be second and third tier schools with relatively large admitted pools - e.g. UVA, Michigan, Georgetown.
This is true and I think why OP is feeling insecure. On some level I think she is disappointed in her kid's college admission outcomes and that's triggered by hearing about public school kids going to the same school. It's not that she thinks she "wasted" the money on private school. It's that her kid got into a school that is considered "second and third tier" among competitive private school families.
It's class status fear. She doesn't want to be lumped in with public school families and their great-but-not-elite college options. She wants to stay in that upper echelon and she wants her kid to stay there too. She knows kids at their private who are going to Yale and Stanford and similar. Likely some of them are real standouts and others had an "in" (legacy or donor status) that she can't replicate for her kid.
She feels she's slipping down a ladder rung and here comes some public school parent saying "oh hey look at that -- we're on the same rung!" and it is freaking. her. out.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why do you need a "come back"? Do you need a "gotcha" to feel better about your choices?
So the OP should just sit with the insult in the face of rudeness?
It's not really an insult, just an observation. And it's not an incorrect one. Sometimes the truth is uncomfortable.
I may think you’ve gained weight. Observed it, if you will. Are you uncomfortable if I point it out? It’s not wrong. Maybe it will help you?
That's a really bad analogy. OP chose to spend the money to get a certain outcome. Her friend didn't need to spend the money. It's more like if OP had said "I took Ozempic and lost 30 pounds!" and her friend said "I ate sensibly and exercised and lost 30 pounds too!" It's not a slam at OP for using Ozempic...it's just an observation that the friend got there another way. OP clearly feels sensitive about using Ozempic (ie private school) and is reading things into her friend's comment. That's on her.
OP never said she paid for private school to get a certain outcome (assuming you mean college outcome)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why do you need a "come back"? Do you need a "gotcha" to feel better about your choices?
So the OP should just sit with the insult in the face of rudeness?
It's not really an insult, just an observation. And it's not an incorrect one. Sometimes the truth is uncomfortable.
I may think you’ve gained weight. Observed it, if you will. Are you uncomfortable if I point it out? It’s not wrong. Maybe it will help you?
That's a really bad analogy. OP chose to spend the money to get a certain outcome. Her friend didn't need to spend the money. It's more like if OP had said "I took Ozempic and lost 30 pounds!" and her friend said "I ate sensibly and exercised and lost 30 pounds too!" It's not a slam at OP for using Ozempic...it's just an observation that the friend got there another way. OP clearly feels sensitive about using Ozempic (ie private school) and is reading things into her friend's comment. That's on her.
Do you not see that this sort of response is obnoxious? Have a filter - this is totally a judgement filled statement.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why is it only OP is allowed to state where her DD got in but the other parent is not?
Because OP paid for private school. She's better than public school parents and is annoyed that those lowly public school kids might have achievements similar to her kid.
Your public school kids may get into the same colleges, but they will always lack the private school je ne sais quoi.
Anonymous wrote:Given that (as far as I can tell) OP never returned to this thread, and combined with the weird projection and lack of detail about the other parents’ comments, I’m pretty sure this is just a troll post.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Any elegant comeback ideas for when a parent highlights their public school child got into the same college(s) as our private school daughter? The passive-aggressive point they are trying to make is that we wasted our money on private school tuition and we should have just stayed in the public system and would have ended up at the same place.So far, I've been using variations of "Good for you/them!"
The fact that you are looking for a comeback to this (and you are projecting something the other person didn’t say) means you are actually a wee bit insecure about this and the inference hit a nerve. It’s super weird when private school parents pretend they don’t hope their investment in tuition produces success and good college admission outcomes.
The weird thing is how public school parents don't understand that "better college placement" is not the motivation of every parent who chooses private over public. We have two children that attended (different) Big 3 and live in a very strong public district. One kid is the type to be in all the hardest classes and applying to T20 schools - the other was the type that is very smart but has some executive functioning challenges and took some highest level classes but not across the board. Both had the option to go to public HS and considered it. Both chose to go to their respective Big 3s based on other factors. As parents college placement had zero weight on this choice and it also did not factor in for the the kids. And we have never stated once to anyone that we think our private schools are better than the public option - they are just different paths - we are lucky enough to have the resources to pay private (and for private colleges too).
The weird thing is that if the above was the major reason for private OP would not be here sourcing “ an elegant comeback.” People who are secure in themselves and decisions a) don’t need them or b) when the rare occasion arises that they do, are readily able to respond.