Anonymous wrote:You will likely get at max a $5K discount off the $55K from NCS if you make $300K and only have one kid.
I speak from experience within the past year.
I've never applied for Sidwell aid.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The entitlement is unreal
+1
We give generously to our scholarship fund at our k-12 and I’d be livid if even a cent went to a family like yours. Rent a room in your house, tutor on the side, pull out a heloc, etc. The kids i know at our school who receive generous aid are not in a position to do any of the above. My dd’s good friend is first generation, both parents work 2 jobs, the grandparents, parents and all 3 kids live in a 2 bedroom apt. These are the families that benefit bc private would be out of reach, and it has been life changing for this little girl. Her alternative would be to go to an awful public school w/ no support bc only one parent is even fluent in English.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The entitlement is unreal
+1
We give generously to our scholarship fund at our k-12 and I’d be livid if even a cent went to a family like yours. Rent a room in your house, tutor on the side, pull out a heloc, etc. The kids i know at our school who receive generous aid are not in a position to do any of the above. My dd’s good friend is first generation, both parents work 2 jobs, the grandparents, parents and all 3 kids live in a 2 bedroom apt. These are the families that benefit bc private would be out of reach, and it has been life changing for this little girl. Her alternative would be to go to an awful public school w/ no support bc only one parent is even fluent in English.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The entitlement is unreal
+1
We give generously to our scholarship fund at our k-12 and I’d be livid if even a cent went to a family like yours. Rent a room in your house, tutor on the side, pull out a heloc, etc. The kids i know at our school who receive generous aid are not in a position to do any of the above. My dd’s good friend is first generation, both parents work 2 jobs, the grandparents, parents and all 3 kids live in a 2 bedroom apt. These are the families that benefit bc private would be out of reach, and it has been life changing for this little girl. Her alternative would be to go to an awful public school w/ no support bc only one parent is even fluent in English.
You sound like a self righteous prick.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The entitlement is unreal
+1
We give generously to our scholarship fund at our k-12 and I’d be livid if even a cent went to a family like yours. Rent a room in your house, tutor on the side, pull out a heloc, etc. The kids i know at our school who receive generous aid are not in a position to do any of the above. My dd’s good friend is first generation, both parents work 2 jobs, the grandparents, parents and all 3 kids live in a 2 bedroom apt. These are the families that benefit bc private would be out of reach, and it has been life changing for this little girl. Her alternative would be to go to an awful public school w/ no support bc only one parent is even fluent in English.
You sound like a self righteous prick.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You are wealthy. You should be full pay.
Sell your house and live more within a budget that will allow you to afford the education you want for your kid. If they get in, of course! That's always a crapshoot.
New poster here but 300k HHI in the DC area is not wealthy. We have a similar income and support one elderly parent and cannot afford full pay at 40k and above. We’ve focused on the 25-30k schools. DC needs the smaller class size so we make private a priority.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The entitlement is unreal
+1
We give generously to our scholarship fund at our k-12 and I’d be livid if even a cent went to a family like yours. Rent a room in your house, tutor on the side, pull out a heloc, etc. The kids i know at our school who receive generous aid are not in a position to do any of the above. My dd’s good friend is first generation, both parents work 2 jobs, the grandparents, parents and all 3 kids live in a 2 bedroom apt. These are the families that benefit bc private would be out of reach, and it has been life changing for this little girl. Her alternative would be to go to an awful public school w/ no support bc only one parent is even fluent in English.
Anonymous wrote:The entitlement is unreal
Anonymous wrote:There was a thread a few days ago with people with HHI 300k only paying 10 k of a 50k price tag.
Where do we think they attend and/or what do you suppose is special about their circumstance?