Anonymous wrote:I wanted to echo chaos was part of our decision to move as well. The level of chaos intensifies each year.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So to understand correctly, you think that at some point all DCPS, and the public charters (BASIS, Latin), and the special admissions schools (Walls), will not be good enough/your kids will be too bright for them? But they’re still in pre-k? Or you want a backup?
I’m not trying to be snarky. I just don’t understand.
OP here. I don't really know. Very overwhelmed by the whole education ecosystem. How do those charters and special admission schools compare to private schools? Admission at those is by chance, right? At the risk of revealing too much, my kids are twins and the DCPS lottery does not give any advantage to multiples when it comes to keeping them together. I would consider splitting them up for high school but they need each other right now and we've already had to decline an offer to a preferred public school because one got in and the other did not.
I don't think my kids are/will be better than anyone else, it's just that both parents are reasonably smart and we had the privilege of going to private school where we grew up and want to make that available to them if it makes sense for our family and they're cut out for it academically and socially. I am worried that they'll get to a certain grade and certain paths will be closed to them because we stayed in DCPS too long.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Relief from daycare costs and lack of a tuition payment is great. Full stop. But if you accept the notion that DCPS, at some point in a kid's academic career, becomes a less-than-ideal learning environment for bright kids, when do you make the change? We can't afford the Beauvoirs of the world for grade school, which is fine because STA/NCS and that ilk are probably not feasible for us financially anyway.
I won't say what age my kids are other than to say that they cannot yet read or write and still bring nap mats to school. In other words, I know that it's probably way too early to be worrying about this stuff. But, we are already seeing peer families start to jockey for spots at "better" schools in the DCPS system, talking about feeder schools, and starting to lay out a plan for their kids' academic futures. I worry about getting too comfortable in public school because it's free and it's "fine for now" and then next thing we know, they're not academically ready for a more challenging academic environment in a private middle/high school.
I'm looking for actual input on what grade to be targeting for a move to a private school from DCPS that would maximize relief from education costs while preparing my kids to be successful when the quality of the school matters more. Also if you read this and are inclined to call me poor or a shitty parent for enjoying free school, feel free to move along.
We moved for 4th. Kids are calmer, happier, excited to go to school again. Dcps is fine in k and 1st and gets progressively worse in upper grades. Make the transition earlier if it makes sense financially so your kids can transition more easily and make friends. It is really a night and day in terms of the experience.
Anonymous wrote:Relief from daycare costs and lack of a tuition payment is great. Full stop. But if you accept the notion that DCPS, at some point in a kid's academic career, becomes a less-than-ideal learning environment for bright kids, when do you make the change? We can't afford the Beauvoirs of the world for grade school, which is fine because STA/NCS and that ilk are probably not feasible for us financially anyway.
I won't say what age my kids are other than to say that they cannot yet read or write and still bring nap mats to school. In other words, I know that it's probably way too early to be worrying about this stuff. But, we are already seeing peer families start to jockey for spots at "better" schools in the DCPS system, talking about feeder schools, and starting to lay out a plan for their kids' academic futures. I worry about getting too comfortable in public school because it's free and it's "fine for now" and then next thing we know, they're not academically ready for a more challenging academic environment in a private middle/high school.
I'm looking for actual input on what grade to be targeting for a move to a private school from DCPS that would maximize relief from education costs while preparing my kids to be successful when the quality of the school matters more. Also if you read this and are inclined to call me poor or a shitty parent for enjoying free school, feel free to move along.
Anonymous wrote:I have a bright kid. He is in class with even brighter kids in DCPS. The ones who needed help, peeled off to privates for 5th or even before.
Mine will stay in public. I cannot get myself to spend any money on k-12. It will be millions by the time they are 30 if it stays in the market.
Anonymous wrote:I have a bright kid. He is in class with even brighter kids in DCPS. The ones who needed help, peeled off to privates for 5th or even before.
Mine will stay in public. I cannot get myself to spend any money on k-12. It will be millions by the time they are 30 if it stays in the market.
Then why do you troll the private school forums if you think your very bright kid is perfect with other very bright kids in dcps.