Anonymous wrote:DD13 would really like to attend a specific private all-girls HS. I'm open to it, and believe she would be admitted, but it depends on how much FA we get: we simply cannot afford full freight. Commute is also an obstacle.
Our local public HS is very good and DD has friends headed there. I don't want her to think it is a "disappointing" option. But, I can see advantages to the private school and agree it would be a more comfortable environment for her specific personality.
Should I let her apply and get her hopes up? Or decide that it just doesn't work for our family and not put her through the up and down of applying, only to get in with a FA package that is still too much for us to take on?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It isn’t just income. I know a family with one child that had a total income of 190,000. Owned a home in a nicer suburb. One child. One parent did part time jobs here and there. In other words one spouse was underemployed. They got into several schools and were offered ZERO aid. The message sent was you earn enough and/or both of you need to have a job. Now 55k is a big tuition bill for an income of 190k. But it is probably doable. To me the shocker was no aid at all and I think that had to do with one parent was mostly a stay home. Not ok for high school age.
This was our situation, because I’m part time. We were hopeful that we might get a little aid (even 10% would ease the load) because we laid out why I’m part time — I spend hours a week supporting the care of three of our aging (and at the time, one dying in hospice) parents with medical appointments, home maintenance, grocery shopping, etc. That wasn’t good enough. And fine, we scrape by, and it’s worth it for us.
you cannot expect the school to subsidize the parents if they are not working
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It isn’t just income. I know a family with one child that had a total income of 190,000. Owned a home in a nicer suburb. One child. One parent did part time jobs here and there. In other words one spouse was underemployed. They got into several schools and were offered ZERO aid. The message sent was you earn enough and/or both of you need to have a job. Now 55k is a big tuition bill for an income of 190k. But it is probably doable. To me the shocker was no aid at all and I think that had to do with one parent was mostly a stay home. Not ok for high school age.
This was our situation, because I’m part time. We were hopeful that we might get a little aid (even 10% would ease the load) because we laid out why I’m part time — I spend hours a week supporting the care of three of our aging (and at the time, one dying in hospice) parents with medical appointments, home maintenance, grocery shopping, etc. That wasn’t good enough. And fine, we scrape by, and it’s worth it for us.
Anonymous wrote:It isn’t just income. I know a family with one child that had a total income of 190,000. Owned a home in a nicer suburb. One child. One parent did part time jobs here and there. In other words one spouse was underemployed. They got into several schools and were offered ZERO aid. The message sent was you earn enough and/or both of you need to have a job. Now 55k is a big tuition bill for an income of 190k. But it is probably doable. To me the shocker was no aid at all and I think that had to do with one parent was mostly a stay home. Not ok for high school age.
Anonymous wrote:Temporarily stop funding your retirement if she gets in, so you can pay for it.
Anonymous wrote:She's a big girl.
When our fifth grader wanted to go to private school we told her what the cost would be and made clear that if she applied and got in it would all come down to financial aid. When she got in and the aid wasn't enough, she understood. And off she went to public school.
Your eighth grader can handle it.
Anonymous wrote:It isn’t just income. I know a family with one child that had a total income of 190,000. Owned a home in a nicer suburb. One child. One parent did part time jobs here and there. In other words one spouse was underemployed. They got into several schools and were offered ZERO aid. The message sent was you earn enough and/or both of you need to have a job. Now 55k is a big tuition bill for an income of 190k. But it is probably doable. To me the shocker was no aid at all and I think that had to do with one parent was mostly a stay home. Not ok for high school age.