Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Because virtual school is dumb, but the private school knows it has to justify tuition.
Private school parent of a HS student here. Our private school already justifies tuition even without virtual school during snow days.
1. School is not cancelled for ridiculous reasons. My kid was back in school on Thursday, January 29, following one true snow day on Monday and two remote learning days on Tuesday and Wednesday. All while MCPS students wasted time playing on their phones for an entire week.
2. Smaller class sizes...about half the size (or sometimes a third of the size) of MCPS.
3. Nicer facilities. Bathrooms all work and aren't closed. No vaping or other activities in bathroom (beyond some girls putting on makeup).
4. No grade inflation.
5. Teachers who are mission driven vs. benefit/salary driven.
6. Strong sense of community. Smaller overall class size (less than 100).
7. Amazing college counseling support. Lots of contact with counselor and counselor support for students seeking to get into certain schools. Some strong relationships with those schools that my DD wants to attend.
8. School was open during the pandemic.
9. Wonderful school trips for different groups of students (Spain, Austria, Costa Rica are recent trips).
10. Religion...this is a religious school. Having theology as a subject is something my daughter loves.
So for the PP, private school has SO MANY other reasons for a family to consider beyond school being open after a snow storm.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Because virtual school is dumb, but the private school knows it has to justify tuition.
Im actually going to jump in here and disagree. I had one going to private on athletic scholarship and the teaching/learning in night and day. They were allowed one true snow day and then every day off after was a virtual day. And at least for middle schoolers and high schoolers it was interactive classes with cameras on (uniform top on and shown) and assignments were given. It worked very well.
Our experience was the same. After the first day of the new school, my DD stated she had no idea where these teachers had learned to teach but she was so excited and that enthusiasm lasted until the end of her private K-8 - four years of literally being excited to go to school everyday. And this was not an expensive fancy schmancy private school - it was a religious school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There’s a long thread asking about the progress of MCPS’s virtual learning plan for weather emergencies. MCPS said it would prepare one in 2024, but here we are in 2026 and nothing was done. You should be asking why this plan hasn’t been prepared and submitted to the state of Maryland. Other of neighboring Maryland countries (PG, Baltimore, Anne Arundel) prepared their plan and had it approved and have had virtual learning during these snow storms.
https://www.dcurbanmom.com/jforum/posts/list/1315160.page
Wow - I did not know other counties in Maryland were doing this. For those saying “go private” for my MCPS kid - no. Public is a better fit for him, especially, if he actually had school everyday.![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Every child needs a computer at home. I don't know where you live but I teach at a school where kids share a room with 3 other adults. Not every child has the supplies to learn at home.
In other counties the parents let the school know if they need supplies. When there is an expected need for virtual learning, those kids take what they need (tablet, laptop, hotspot, food, headphones) home.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Because virtual school is dumb, but the private school knows it has to justify tuition.
Im actually going to jump in here and disagree. I had one going to private on athletic scholarship and the teaching/learning in night and day. They were allowed one true snow day and then every day off after was a virtual day. And at least for middle schoolers and high schoolers it was interactive classes with cameras on (uniform top on and shown) and assignments were given. It worked very well.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Because virtual school is dumb, but the private school knows it has to justify tuition.
Private school parent of a HS student here. Our private school already justifies tuition even without virtual school during snow days.
1. School is not cancelled for ridiculous reasons. My kid was back in school on Thursday, January 29, following one true snow day on Monday and two remote learning days on Tuesday and Wednesday. All while MCPS students wasted time playing on their phones for an entire week.
2. Smaller class sizes...about half the size (or sometimes a third of the size) of MCPS.
3. Nicer facilities. Bathrooms all work and aren't closed. No vaping or other activities in bathroom (beyond some girls putting on makeup).
4. No grade inflation.
5. Teachers who are mission driven vs. benefit/salary driven.
6. Strong sense of community. Smaller overall class size (less than 100).
7. Amazing college counseling support. Lots of contact with counselor and counselor support for students seeking to get into certain schools. Some strong relationships with those schools that my DD wants to attend.
8. School was open during the pandemic.
9. Wonderful school trips for different groups of students (Spain, Austria, Costa Rica are recent trips).
10. Religion...this is a religious school. Having theology as a subject is something my daughter loves.
So for the PP, private school has SO MANY other reasons for a family to consider beyond school being open after a snow storm.
Anonymous wrote:There’s a long thread asking about the progress of MCPS’s virtual learning plan for weather emergencies. MCPS said it would prepare one in 2024, but here we are in 2026 and nothing was done. You should be asking why this plan hasn’t been prepared and submitted to the state of Maryland. Other of neighboring Maryland countries (PG, Baltimore, Anne Arundel) prepared their plan and had it approved and have had virtual learning during these snow storms.
https://www.dcurbanmom.com/jforum/posts/list/1315160.page
Anonymous wrote:Not virtual school, exactly, but this time my kid got assignments from teachers in every single one of her AP classes.
Anonymous wrote:Because virtual school is dumb, but the private school knows it has to justify tuition.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Because virtual school is dumb, but the private school knows it has to justify tuition.
Private school parent of a HS student here. Our private school already justifies tuition even without virtual school during snow days.
1. School is not cancelled for ridiculous reasons. My kid was back in school on Thursday, January 29, following one true snow day on Monday and two remote learning days on Tuesday and Wednesday. All while MCPS students wasted time playing on their phones for an entire week.
2. Smaller class sizes...about half the size (or sometimes a third of the size) of MCPS.
3. Nicer facilities. Bathrooms all work and aren't closed. No vaping or other activities in bathroom (beyond some girls putting on makeup).
4. No grade inflation.
5. Teachers who are mission driven vs. benefit/salary driven.
6. Strong sense of community. Smaller overall class size (less than 100).
7. Amazing college counseling support. Lots of contact with counselor and counselor support for students seeking to get into certain schools. Some strong relationships with those schools that my DD wants to attend.
8. School was open during the pandemic.
9. Wonderful school trips for different groups of students (Spain, Austria, Costa Rica are recent trips).
10. Religion...this is a religious school. Having theology as a subject is something my daughter loves.
So for the PP, private school has SO MANY other reasons for a family to consider beyond school being open after a snow storm.
Anonymous wrote:Because virtual school is dumb, but the private school knows it has to justify tuition.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, you are better off comparing one public school district to another, not to private school.
What did APS do? DCPS? FCPS?
And if your only complaint is that one of your kids was bored bored bored, then you can easily fix that yourself.
Um, DCPS was open yesterday for school
Anne Arundel and PG County are Maryland public schools that had virtual learning yesterday.
This is already being discussed in a different thread on this forum about McPS lack of proper progress in submitting their required virtual learning plan to MSDE.
Anonymous wrote:OP, you are better off comparing one public school district to another, not to private school.
What did APS do? DCPS? FCPS?
And if your only complaint is that one of your kids was bored bored bored, then you can easily fix that yourself.