Anonymous wrote:Thank you to those people who have posted with suggestions for supplementing my kids' education and changing my perspective on what makes for a good education. I don't really understand why people have posted saying no, their kids' education is much better than their own -- good for you, but that is the opposite of my situation. We will keep our eyes open and supplement where we can, and consider the nuclear option of moving if we absolutely have to.
To those who couldn't understand how this was possible: my story is not uncommon given the rising inequality in this country and the tremendous differences in cost of living. I'm not going to name names and get into a discussion of specific schools, but I grew up in a mid size college town far from big cities, with little poverty but also very few super rich. I now live in the D.C. metro area within commuting distance of the city, where the rich are doing great but there's very little middle class, and significant numbers of quite poor families. The hollowing out of the middle class is real, and it's amplified in urban areas. Combine that with a trend away from advanced classes (or just calling everyone "advanced" now) and what I see are classes with an extremely wide range of needs, with nobody really being taught exactly at their level. I'm sure I sound sentimental and I hope I'm wrong.
Anonymous wrote:If you don't think your child is getting enough enrichment, then you need to step up your game. Don't blame the schools.
As for over crowding, we moved. Left the area, moved back home and there are 15 kids in my daughter's K class with a teacher and a full time aid (who taught K forever, just didn't want to do the paperwork anymore).
Anonymous wrote:Join me if you are struggling with this. Due to a variety of factors, my husband and I are doing much better than my parents did at our ages, but my children will never get the experiences in school that I got. Our schools are much more crowded, offer fewer high quality clubs and activities, and make it much more difficult to access advanced curriculum. Should I find a way not to care, or should I take extraordinary steps to change our situation? What have you done? It hurts me knowing what a great education I got, and not giving something similar to them. Yet it seems that the world has changed so thoroughly that my 1980s education (mid size town, not high cost of living, excellent public schools, well funded) doesn't exist anymore.
Anonymous wrote:My dd is getting a way better education than I did.
Me- Shop, home economics, band, chorus
dd- coding, graphic design, 3 D art, movie making, etc.
Me- Tracked for general education throughout school
DD- Access to AP, Honors, DE, general ed
Me- Clubs..what clubs?
DD- Too many to write down.
Op...you need to move.
DD-
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My DC are getting a far better education than I received (even though I somehow managed to get into an Ivy). Maybe that feeling varies by school. My DC still in ES, but they are far ahead of where I was in both math and critical writing skills.
+1. I envy my kid's public education, and I went to private.