Anonymous wrote:Fair does not mean equal. It means everyone gets what's right for them. I've been telling my kids this since before they could understand it, so they now really grasp that fair does NOT mean equal. Does my son have a bunch of hair clips? No. He doesn't want them. THat's fair. Does my daughter have four baseball hats? No, she doesn't want them (because then her hair clips won't show). It's fair. Even though it's not equal.
Anonymous wrote:Do what is right for each kid at each stage of their life and be open about it with everyone. Choose logical stages(early ES, late ES, MS, HS) as checkin points to review what is working and what is not. In MS and HS be sure you listen to each kids preference and be willing to pursue a variety of different private schools, magnet programs, local ps, etc. be sure to reiterate to each that its their individual journey, not their sibling’s journey.
Anonymous wrote:Paying for the eldest and youngest and not the middle seems like a hell of a way to reenforce middle child syndrome
Anonymous wrote:Do kids care about tuition? Let the kids visit and pick their schools. My kids did and ended up at different schools they love. Never in the process did they ask about or compare tuition
Anonymous wrote:I think you should be honest with yourself on whether it poses a finance challenge to continue with private. Then stick with whatever decision you make make for middle for the youngest as well.
Anonymous wrote:A note on something to think about: public schools have consequences for delinquencies and absences. Private schools usually don’t. This can affect schedules when start times and holidays differ. My private school student was late unexcusec 13 times one semester, and missed school, because we went on spring break on the public school calendar. No one minded, but the other way around a lot of people would have minded
Anonymous wrote:I would search for other threads on this topic. There people who respond that you should do what works best for each child, but there are also usually quite a few who had been in that situation as a child and who say that it did generate resentment.
I’d look at different schools — your second sounds like the exact kind of kid that would benefit from an all boys school. Teachers, especially at competitive privates, love girls, who sit still and have neat handwriting, etc.
Also, even if you didn’t mean it that way, the way you describe your second child could be interpreted by them to be “you aren’t as smart as your sister,” which would be an unfortunate message to send.
If I were you, I’d find a private school that was a good fit for second child (not necessarily the same one) and pay for it through elementary. Re-evaluate for middle school and HS, when the kid will be able to express their own preferences.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Paying for the eldest and youngest and not the middle seems like a hell of a way to reenforce middle child syndrome
OP here and 100% true. If I think private would be a better fit for youngest kid later I will really have painted myself into a corner.
Hi OP- if you’re able, you could set what would have been the tuition money aside for your middle child for something else later. I haven’t fully thought that suggestion through, just throwing it out there. Does middle child seem to have a preference?
NP yes like super fancy sleepaway camp
No, more along the lines of contributing to grad school if the parents would normally only pay through undergrad, or something more along those lines. I also see the logic of a prior poster that said everything doesn’t have to be equal. Different things for different circumstances/families.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Paying for the eldest and youngest and not the middle seems like a hell of a way to reenforce middle child syndrome
OP here and 100% true. If I think private would be a better fit for youngest kid later I will really have painted myself into a corner.
Hi OP- if you’re able, you could set what would have been the tuition money aside for your middle child for something else later. I haven’t fully thought that suggestion through, just throwing it out there. Does middle child seem to have a preference?
NP yes like super fancy sleepaway camp