Anonymous wrote:If OP decides to pay private while attending public. Can she change her mind and go back to the private 2 months later since she’s still technically paying for her spot?
Anonymous wrote:Claim abuse
Anonymous wrote:DD has been in private school for the last 3 years. The experience has been very good but she decided to try public school once again. We notified the private school four days after the deadline that was on May 31. The school states that we need to pay tuition for the full year as mentioned in the re-enrollment contract. We could contract insurance that will cover 60% of the cost but then our daughter will need to attend 2 weeks to the private school and, because the public school starts earlier, she will miss 3 weeks of public school. Hence, she will have a tough start in a new environment.
What are our options? Any advice? Should we hire a lawyer? Recommendations on how to search for one?
Anonymous wrote:DD has been in private school for the last 3 years. The experience has been very good but she decided to try public school once again. We notified the private school four days after the deadline that was on May 31. The school states that we need to pay tuition for the full year as mentioned in the re-enrollment contract. We could contract insurance that will cover 60% of the cost but then our daughter will need to attend 2 weeks to the private school and, because the public school starts earlier, she will miss 3 weeks of public school. Hence, she will have a tough start in a new environment.
What are our options? Any advice? Should we hire a lawyer? Recommendations on how to search for one?
Anonymous wrote:I think you need to stick out the private one more year and switch to public next year. There's a reason for the contract deadline and it's to avoid parents doing this.
Anonymous wrote:I'm sorry, OP. I think the others are right. You missed the deadline and I can't imagine what a lawyer could do for you except cost you more money. This is a good lesson to teach your daughter that deadlines matter. If she's had a very good experience it won't be a big deal to stay at the current school for another year.
Regarding tuition insurance covering 60%, is "changing one's mind" really one of the covered reasons in your policy? It certainly is not a covered reason in mine. Check this first.
Anonymous wrote:Why would you throw money at a lawyer when you have a contract? That would just be losing more money.
A classmate of my dd changed to public when her family ended up moving to a good district over the summer. She attended the first week of public, said she was sick for 2 weeks and attended the private and then went back to public.
Anonymous wrote:DD has been in private school for the last 3 years. The experience has been very good but she decided to try public school once again. We notified the private school four days after the deadline that was on May 31. The school states that we need to pay tuition for the full year as mentioned in the re-enrollment contract. We could contract insurance that will cover 60% of the cost but then our daughter will need to attend 2 weeks to the private school and, because the public school starts earlier, she will miss 3 weeks of public school. Hence, she will have a tough start in a new environment.
What are our options? Any advice? Should we hire a lawyer? Recommendations on how to search for one?
Anonymous wrote:I guess you tell your daughter it's not happening this year. Do it next year and plan accordingly so deadlines aren't missed.