Anonymous wrote:Academics as parents your job is to give your kid the best education possible.
Get some parenting classes your kids deserve better than your stupidity.
No one I know is worried about "social fit" when picking a school. That is absurd. Except for new money wanna bees.
Anonymous wrote:How much did your family weigh social fit and academics in the private school search? Just some background, 2 of our kids are athletic and social. One isn't as academic as the other, but we have a third kid who is not athletic at all and is smart, quirky, and introverted. I know social fit is the utmost importance for this kid and I would hate to have her an in environment full of athletic extroverts. Finding a school that fits all three seems impossible. We feel like we are in over our heads because the more academic schools are too intense for one kid and not sporty enough. And the more sporty schools may not a social fit for the quirky kid. Any suggestions?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Academics as parents your job is to give your kid the best education possible.
Get some parenting classes your kids deserve better than your stupidity.
No one I know is worried about "social fit" when picking a school. That is absurd. Except for new money wanna bees.
This is harsher language than I would use, but I agree with the thought. It's about academics, OP. "Social fit" is a made up concept.
Anonymous wrote:Academics as parents your job is to give your kid the best education possible.
Get some parenting classes your kids deserve better than your stupidity.
No one I know is worried about "social fit" when picking a school. That is absurd. Except for new money wanna bees.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's about academics, OP. "Social fit" is a made up concept.
...until your kid's academics suffer because they don't have friends, are being bullied, or both.
That's what any teacher will tell you, based on reality, not someone's flippant ideological nonsense. Kids that are too upset to access the learning process won't learn. They will withdraw and stumble along or fail. No amount of browbeating, punishing, or cajoling will change that.
That's what actually happens in classrooms vs. glib BS.
Way to completely miss the point.
"Suffer" doesn't necessarily mean not learning. It could just as easily mean someone who would ordinarily be an A student getting Bs due to depression, self-harm, or other mental health challenges that often result from not fitting in socially.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's about academics, OP. "Social fit" is a made up concept.
...until your kid's academics suffer because they don't have friends, are being bullied, or both.
That's what any teacher will tell you, based on reality, not someone's flippant ideological nonsense. Kids that are too upset to access the learning process won't learn. They will withdraw and stumble along or fail. No amount of browbeating, punishing, or cajoling will change that.
That's what actually happens in classrooms vs. glib BS.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's about academics, OP. "Social fit" is a made up concept.
...until your kid's academics suffer because they don't have friends, are being bullied, or both.
Anonymous wrote:It's about academics, OP. "Social fit" is a made up concept.
Anonymous wrote:Academics as parents your job is to give your kid the best education possible.
Get some parenting classes your kids deserve better than your stupidity.
No one I know is worried about "social fit" when picking a school. That is absurd. Except for new money wanna bees.
Anonymous wrote:Academics as parents your job is to give your kid the best education possible.
Get some parenting classes your kids deserve better than your stupidity.
No one I know is worried about "social fit" when picking a school. That is absurd. Except for new money wanna bees.
Anonymous wrote:No one I know is worried about "social fit" when picking a school. That is absurd.