Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Um, maybe you should include religious schools in your question, because if you are wealthy and smart (the people you seem interested in) and religious you might consider sending your kid to a religious school. So your sample is already shot by only asking about private, non-religious schools.
Signed,
A smart person of faith with a kid at a Friends school
Yes, but obviously I would expect the population that sends it's children to religious schools to have a high church attendance rate. That's not saying that these people can't be wealthy and highly educated as well.
Anonymous wrote:Um, maybe you should include religious schools in your question, because if you are wealthy and smart (the people you seem interested in) and religious you might consider sending your kid to a religious school. So your sample is already shot by only asking about private, non-religious schools.
Signed,
A smart person of faith with a kid at a Friends school
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't think (m)any highly educated, genuinely smart people are truly religious (and I'm continually bemused by how many engage in the charade -- probably more with kids in privates than in publics).
I am not at all religious myself, but I could certainly point you to a number of MDs and PhDs I know who are. Do they qualify as smart, in your mind? How about the ones with Ivy League degrees? Do they count as smart? And do you actually know the meaning of "bemused"?![]()
No more than 20% of my Ivy League law school classmates were smart (and I went to one of the good ones). Of those, one also was pursuing a degree at the Div School, so he probably counts as genuinely religious. The rest? Doubtful.
Anonymous wrote:Plus you aren't going to get any kind of accurate read. Some people will say one thing, others will say another. It is totally meaningless.
I'm a private school graduate who also finds your assumptions offensive. Essentially you are relying on stereotypes of both private and public school families.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Plus you aren't going to get any kind of accurate read. Some people will say one thing, others will say another. It is totally meaningless.
I'm a private school graduate who also finds your assumptions offensive. Essentially you are relying on stereotypes of both private and public school families.
Geesh, lighten up people. I'm trying to get responses from high income parents who are presumably well-educated. Does it not make sense to post the question on a board where people are spending $30,000/year to educate their child? Must suck to go through life with such a chip on your shoulder.
Anonymous wrote:Graduate of "Big 3" and ivy league here. My faith is a very important part of my life.
You have no idea if someone who attends services engages in a charade or not. And you have no right to judge.
This entire thread is absurd.
Anonymous wrote:Plus you aren't going to get any kind of accurate read. Some people will say one thing, others will say another. It is totally meaningless.
I'm a private school graduate who also finds your assumptions offensive. Essentially you are relying on stereotypes of both private and public school families.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't think (m)any highly educated, genuinely smart people are truly religious (and I'm continually bemused by how many engage in the charade -- probably more with kids in privates than in publics).
I am not at all religious myself, but I could certainly point you to a number of MDs and PhDs I know who are. Do they qualify as smart, in your mind? How about the ones with Ivy League degrees? Do they count as smart? And do you actually know the meaning of "bemused"?![]()
Anonymous wrote:I don't think (m)any highly educated, genuinely smart people are truly religious (and I'm continually bemused by how many engage in the charade -- probably more with kids in privates than in publics).