Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If they have always planned to do private school they may genuinely have never looked into or paid attention to which public they are zoned for. I don’t find this hard to believe at all.
I highly doubt people who put their kids in daycare are going to do private school.
Anonymous wrote:Stop being a nosy loser, OP. Do you really walk around thinking people owe you an explanation?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If they have always planned to do private school they may genuinely have never looked into or paid attention to which public they are zoned for. I don’t find this hard to believe at all.
I highly doubt people who put their kids in daycare are going to do private school.
Anonymous wrote:I bought a house knowing the elementary school was right down the street and my future kids could walk there. That was it. Didn’t really care about anything else. If I had not literally been able to see the school 5 houses away, I have no idea when I would have figured out what school we were zoned to. But probably not until elementary was close.
And school ratings are BS. I just recently looked and my kids go to schools that are rated a 4 on great schools. They are having wonderful school experiences. They are rich, white kids. The main problem at most schools with low ratings is equity — which I fully believe is a problem we need to solve. But agonizing over the ratings of schools for my kids (with their particular demographic) is silly.
Anonymous wrote:I would think they don't want to have the school conversation with you because they think you'll recruit them, or they'll feel judged, or it'll be boring.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If they have always planned to do private school they may genuinely have never looked into or paid attention to which public they are zoned for. I don’t find this hard to believe at all.
I highly doubt people who put their kids in daycare are going to do private school.
Anonymous wrote:If they have always planned to do private school they may genuinely have never looked into or paid attention to which public they are zoned for. I don’t find this hard to believe at all.
Anonymous wrote:What a weird thread. At this time in the year the year before my son went to k I had no idea where he was going. It was going to be whatever school the neighborhood was zoned to.