Anonymous wrote:It never hurts to ask if you can get a different rate for having 4 kids there. As others have said, Catholic Schools give discounts (my family had 8 kids in Catholic ...pre birth control)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. I make enough money to pay the tuition but am in a very risky business and am not totally confident every single year that I will be able to earn enough all though I have in the past. Why wouldn't the school want to secure a high paying family for the long term by offering them some sort of a discount. If the school has a long wait list then they will probably tell us to buzz off but our kids school doesn't.
You need to get a more stable job. If your income goes down you can apply for financial aid but why should they give you a break because you are a high paying family? There are tons of kids who can full pay waiting to fill your spots.
Then you shouldn’t have had so many kids. I don’t want to subsidize you because you decided to have more kids and want a sexy job.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. I make enough money to pay the tuition but am in a very risky business and am not totally confident every single year that I will be able to earn enough all though I have in the past. Why wouldn't the school want to secure a high paying family for the long term by offering them some sort of a discount. If the school has a long wait list then they will probably tell us to buzz off but our kids school doesn't.
You need to get a more stable job. If your income goes down you can apply for financial aid but why should they give you a break because you are a high paying family? There are tons of kids who can full pay waiting to fill your spots.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. I make enough money to pay the tuition but am in a very risky business and am not totally confident every single year that I will be able to earn enough all though I have in the past. Why wouldn't the school want to secure a high paying family for the long term by offering them some sort of a discount. If the school has a long wait list then they will probably tell us to buzz off but our kids school doesn't.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. I make enough money to pay the tuition but am in a very risky business and am not totally confident every single year that I will be able to earn enough all though I have in the past. Why wouldn't the school want to secure a high paying family for the long term by offering them some sort of a discount. If the school has a long wait list then they will probably tell us to buzz off but our kids school doesn't.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. I make enough money to pay the tuition but am in a very risky business and am not totally confident every single year that I will be able to earn enough all though I have in the past. Why wouldn't the school want to secure a high paying family for the long term by offering them some sort of a discount. If the school has a long wait list then they will probably tell us to buzz off but our kids school doesn't.
Anonymous wrote:We have 4 kids at a 30k a year private school and while we can technically afford it we do not qualify for financial aid and find it fiscally irresponsible. Has anyone had luck going to the school and negotiating a better rate outside of financial aid?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We have 4 kids at a 30k a year private school and while we can technically afford it we do not qualify for financial aid and find it fiscally irresponsible. Has anyone had luck going to the school and negotiating a better rate outside of financial aid?
Most parochial schools offer sibling discounts.
You should persuade your school to do the same -- makes all the sense in the world.
Why would it make all the sense in the world for the school? If OP wouldn't qualify for aid even with four kids, why should the school offer a separate discount? It makes more sense for them to provide discounts (aid) to those who can't otherwise afford it.
Because any business offers volume discounts.
Why? Because it makes things easier to run, and lowers marketing costs.
And yes, private schools are businesses.
Depends on whether this is a school that has unfilled seats, or is one with a WL. If there's a WL, there's no reason to subsidize parents who send multiple kids if they aren't otherwise eligible for FA.
Subsidize might mean a 10 or 20 percent discount, not a free ride. I think it makes sense for OP to pursue. Nothing ventured, nothing gained. It’s easier for the school to hang on to four spots than do the vetting, etc. required to fill them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We have 4 kids at a 30k a year private school and while we can technically afford it we do not qualify for financial aid and find it fiscally irresponsible. Has anyone had luck going to the school and negotiating a better rate outside of financial aid?
Most parochial schools offer sibling discounts.
You should persuade your school to do the same -- makes all the sense in the world.
Why would it make all the sense in the world for the school? If OP wouldn't qualify for aid even with four kids, why should the school offer a separate discount? It makes more sense for them to provide discounts (aid) to those who can't otherwise afford it.
Because any business offers volume discounts.
Why? Because it makes things easier to run, and lowers marketing costs.
And yes, private schools are businesses.
Depends on whether this is a school that has unfilled seats, or is one with a WL. If there's a WL, there's no reason to subsidize parents who send multiple kids if they aren't otherwise eligible for FA.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We have 4 kids at a 30k a year private school and while we can technically afford it we do not qualify for financial aid and find it fiscally irresponsible. Has anyone had luck going to the school and negotiating a better rate outside of financial aid?
Most parochial schools offer sibling discounts.
You should persuade your school to do the same -- makes all the sense in the world.
Why would it make all the sense in the world for the school? If OP wouldn't qualify for aid even with four kids, why should the school offer a separate discount? It makes more sense for them to provide discounts (aid) to those who can't otherwise afford it.
Because any business offers volume discounts.
Why? Because it makes things easier to run, and lowers marketing costs.
And yes, private schools are businesses.