Anonymous wrote:Plenty of affordable neighborhoods in bounds for the BCC cluster. That school has plenty of economic diversity for me. My kids and their friends are not entitled jerks and come from a variety of backgrounds.
Anonymous wrote:Second the public school suggestion. Isn’t the point of private school so that your kid will be surrounded by privilege and will only interact with maybe one acceptable poor? My guess is anyone in that environment is gonna be a bit clueless about how life works for the other 99% and be a bit entitled as a result.
Anonymous wrote:OP, did you honestly think that you would get a real answer here?
100% of the private school parents believe that their kids are not going to become entitled jerks.
100% of the public school parents (or most of them) think that they kids' education is just fine.
My kids are in public, although we could afford private, and I think there's an argument to be made to NOT give your kids the best education possible. (I've got an Ivy degree, fwiw.)
A third option might be a private school in a low-income area. I think there are some great Catholic schools serving very low income communities that are offering a very good education with kids who probably don't act very entitled at all.
Anonymous wrote:Also, to your point about paying for a house in a more expensive neighborhood. Private school for one kid will run you at least $250K (I'm figuring $10K for K-8, and $40K for HS, but it's probably more at the "top" schools.) That buys a fair amount of house --- and when your kid graduates, you can sell the house. Sink that money into private school, and you can't recoup it after they graduate.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Our country doesn't care enough about education to make public schools nearly as good as private schools. We live in a country that cares more about money than education, so you have to throw money at a school one way or another: by living in an elite district or by shelling out for private school.
Does that make you mad? Me too. But it's true.
It's not true. There are plenty of excellent school districts with ordinary houses. You don't have to live in an elite district or pay for private.
I'd it if you could please share some. I'll keep an open mind to moving.
North Arlington, which is pricey
FCPS: schools zoned Langley and McLean, which are wealthy/elite. Or schools zoned for Oakton, Woodson, Chantilly, Lake Braddock, Robinson, Marshall, West Springfield. All of which are socioeconomically diverse and excellent. Avoid eastern county IB HSs.
I’m sure someone can do MoCo for you.