Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We switched from public to private this year. My previously straight A student is now a solid D. Completely unprepared for a single class, in spite of doing homework for hours every night.
Nice. What schools?
I'm curious about this too. I also wonder the age of your child and the impact of covid on mental health. I think it (covid) is silently sucking the teens emotional vitality.
PP are you the former Deal parent who posted a few days ago?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We switched from public to private this year. My previously straight A student is now a solid D. Completely unprepared for a single class, in spite of doing homework for hours every night.
Nice. What schools?
I'm curious about this too. I also wonder the age of your child and the impact of covid on mental health. I think it (covid) is silently sucking the teens emotional vitality.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My MCPS (magnet) public kid is friends with a DC Private Kid in college (T10). They both agree she is much more prepared for college.
Sorry, which one is better prepared? The MCPS kid?
Of course PP will say that. She has to justify her decision!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We switched from public to private this year. My previously straight A student is now a solid D. Completely unprepared for a single class, in spite of doing homework for hours every night.
Nice. What schools?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My MCPS (magnet) public kid is friends with a DC Private Kid in college (T10). They both agree she is much more prepared for college.
Sorry, which one is better prepared? The MCPS kid?
Anonymous wrote:My MCPS (magnet) public kid is friends with a DC Private Kid in college (T10). They both agree she is much more prepared for college.
Anonymous wrote:We moved to private last year, HS students after 10 years in public. For us, the big differences are:
Class size - our public usually had 35 in their HS classes, our private caps at 15
School size - from well over 2,500 to 1,000 for the entire school
Responsiveness - we had to call the school about something relatively minor and it was addressed/resolved in less than 24 hours. In public it can take days to get an answer, longer to set up a meeting, and even longer for any change to happen
Diversity- our public school had more (races socioeconomic, religion, just about every metric you can think of)
Anonymous wrote:We switched from public to private this year. My previously straight A student is now a solid D. Completely unprepared for a single class, in spite of doing homework for hours every night.