Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Here’s a real mindf&$ck: when all of this is over your child is going to inhabit the same colleges and jobs and communities as kids who just sidled up to the local public kindergarten.
It’s nice that you will have a bespoke experience, but it’s more about you than about your child.
Agreed. And it happens before college: OPs kids will apply to high schools alongside kids who went to public from PK on (even to DCPS-gasp!) and they'll all end up in class together for 9th!
And get this---most of the kids who graduate at the top of this class (be it Sidwell or NCS or GDS) will be the ones who are a product of all those years of public schooling.
I'm a private school parent but have seen this play out many times.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Here’s a real mindf&$ck: when all of this is over your child is going to inhabit the same colleges and jobs and communities as kids who just sidled up to the local public kindergarten.
It’s nice that you will have a bespoke experience, but it’s more about you than about your child.
Agreed. And it happens before college: OPs kids will apply to high schools alongside kids who went to public from PK on (even to DCPS-gasp!) and they'll all end up in class together for 9th!
And get this---most of the kids who graduate at the top of this class (be it Sidwell or NCS or GDS) will be the ones who are a product of all those years of public schooling.
I'm a private school parent but have seen this play out many times.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Here’s a real mindf&$ck: when all of this is over your child is going to inhabit the same colleges and jobs and communities as kids who just sidled up to the local public kindergarten.
It’s nice that you will have a bespoke experience, but it’s more about you than about your child.
Ugh. Public school parents are so insecure. It’s getting boring at this point.
As are private parents (see current thread on parent population).
Anonymous wrote:Let me give you some advice as the parent of a first grader. After six weeks of Kindergarten you have no clue whether the school is right for your child.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Here’s a real mindf&$ck: when all of this is over your child is going to inhabit the same colleges and jobs and communities as kids who just sidled up to the local public kindergarten.
It’s nice that you will have a bespoke experience, but it’s more about you than about your child.
Ugh. Public school parents are so insecure. It’s getting boring at this point.
Anonymous wrote:Here’s a real mindf&$ck: when all of this is over your child is going to inhabit the same colleges and jobs and communities as kids who just sidled up to the local public kindergarten.
It’s nice that you will have a bespoke experience, but it’s more about you than about your child.
Anonymous wrote:Here’s a real mindf&$ck: when all of this is over your child is going to inhabit the same colleges and jobs and communities as kids who just sidled up to the local public kindergarten.
It’s nice that you will have a bespoke experience, but it’s more about you than about your child.
Anonymous wrote:Let me give you some advice as the parent of a first grader. After six weeks of Kindergarten you have no clue whether the school is right for your child.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Let me give some advice as a parent of teenagers: where your kid goes to elementary school really does not matter.
It does and it doesn't. Where you go to elementary may not impact college acceptance, but finding the right place for your elementary age child does matter. They need an elementary where they feel supported and can grow and build foundations they'll need for life. So yeah, getting that name recognition for elementary isn't as important as just finding the right fit where your child can flourish.
Anonymous wrote:Let me give some advice as a parent of teenagers: where your kid goes to elementary school really does not matter.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Let me give some advice as a parent of teenagers: where your kid goes to elementary school really does not matter.
so true!