Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Get a better job
Not helpfuk
It is honest though. If a SN private is best option and you want it for your child, then you dramatically cut your expenses, increase your income witha new job that pays more or take on an additional job, and apply for financial aid.
If you don’t want to or can’t do those things, then you figure out how to make public school work for your kid.
It isn’t different than other financial decisions: buying a home, paying for college, or buying a new car. Sending your kid to private school is a luxury, be it a SN private or a non-SN private. Maybe that isn’t how it should work, but you have to work with our current reality.
In your world - but there are other options.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Get a better job
Not helpfuk
It is honest though. If a SN private is best option and you want it for your child, then you dramatically cut your expenses, increase your income witha new job that pays more or take on an additional job, and apply for financial aid.
If you don’t want to or can’t do those things, then you figure out how to make public school work for your kid.
It isn’t different than other financial decisions: buying a home, paying for college, or buying a new car. Sending your kid to private school is a luxury, be it a SN private or a non-SN private. Maybe that isn’t how it should work, but you have to work with our current reality.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Get a better job
Not helpfuk
It is honest though. If a SN private is best option and you want it for your child, then you dramatically cut your expenses, increase your income witha new job that pays more or take on an additional job, and apply for financial aid.
If you don’t want to or can’t do those things, then you figure out how to make public school work for your kid.
It isn’t different than other financial decisions: buying a home, paying for college, or buying a new car. Sending your kid to private school is a luxury, be it a SN private or a non-SN private. Maybe that isn’t how it should work, but you have to work with our current reality.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I wish my child could go to this school but we cannot afford it. How do people afford this school? We live in Arlington and pay 700/mo in property taxes, but when I tried to research private school vouchers for VA, I got a dead end- basically there are no vouchers, just tax credits for companies who contribute to funds for groups that have scholarships for private schools- it was really unclear how I could apply for a scholarship from such a group. We are willing to move to DC. What are the financial options to pay for this school?
doing backwards math - if your property taxes are $8400 a year that tells me your home is valued around $800K? NO WAY will anyone give you aid based on that fact alone.
And moving to DC isn't going to get it done either. it's not like you just apply, and then have it granted. it usually involves you having to get attorneys, and then most likely still getting nothing.
have you looked at private loan options? tapping your home equity?
Our HHI is around $300K, we live in a modest house, drive used cars, haven't taken a vacation in 4 years - so that we can pay for private. it is what it is.
I’d move to DC- not further out. They are more likely to pay for a special school.
+1. You could get a condo or house further out for 400-500k and probably swing private. It’s not pleasant to pay $40k for school but for some kids it’s the best option.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I wish my child could go to this school but we cannot afford it. How do people afford this school? We live in Arlington and pay 700/mo in property taxes, but when I tried to research private school vouchers for VA, I got a dead end- basically there are no vouchers, just tax credits for companies who contribute to funds for groups that have scholarships for private schools- it was really unclear how I could apply for a scholarship from such a group. We are willing to move to DC. What are the financial options to pay for this school?
doing backwards math - if your property taxes are $8400 a year that tells me your home is valued around $800K? NO WAY will anyone give you aid based on that fact alone.
And moving to DC isn't going to get it done either. it's not like you just apply, and then have it granted. it usually involves you having to get attorneys, and then most likely still getting nothing.
have you looked at private loan options? tapping your home equity?
Our HHI is around $300K, we live in a modest house, drive used cars, haven't taken a vacation in 4 years - so that we can pay for private. it is what it is.
I’d move to DC- not further out. They are more likely to pay for a special school.
+1. You could get a condo or house further out for 400-500k and probably swing private. It’s not pleasant to pay $40k for school but for some kids it’s the best option.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I thought most kids at the Lab were there with public funds via an IEP
DC funds about 20% of all Lab School students.
Not sure if any of the suburban districts pay for students to attend.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Get a better job
Not helpfuk
Anonymous wrote:Get a better job
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I wish my child could go to this school but we cannot afford it. How do people afford this school? We live in Arlington and pay 700/mo in property taxes, but when I tried to research private school vouchers for VA, I got a dead end- basically there are no vouchers, just tax credits for companies who contribute to funds for groups that have scholarships for private schools- it was really unclear how I could apply for a scholarship from such a group. We are willing to move to DC. What are the financial options to pay for this school?
doing backwards math - if your property taxes are $8400 a year that tells me your home is valued around $800K? NO WAY will anyone give you aid based on that fact alone.
And moving to DC isn't going to get it done either. it's not like you just apply, and then have it granted. it usually involves you having to get attorneys, and then most likely still getting nothing.
have you looked at private loan options? tapping your home equity?
Our HHI is around $300K, we live in a modest house, drive used cars, haven't taken a vacation in 4 years - so that we can pay for private. it is what it is.
Anonymous wrote:I wish my child could go to this school but we cannot afford it. How do people afford this school? We live in Arlington and pay 700/mo in property taxes, but when I tried to research private school vouchers for VA, I got a dead end- basically there are no vouchers, just tax credits for companies who contribute to funds for groups that have scholarships for private schools- it was really unclear how I could apply for a scholarship from such a group. We are willing to move to DC. What are the financial options to pay for this school?
Anonymous wrote:Virginia does not do school vouchers, and good luck getting them to pupil-place in private (and, even if APS would, I doubt Lab is on their list). If you're looking for the local government to send your kid to special-needs private, you'd have better luck in MD or DC.
Our kid does not go to Lab but goes to a $40K+/year private, special needs school. We pay for it on a HHI of about $300K gross and receive no financial aid. (Our property taxes are similar, but I'm not sure how that's relevant here.) We've done it by living well below our means and scrimping a lot. We have two cars, but one is 13 years old and the other seven (both paid for and neither fancy) and won't buy a new one until the kid is out of special needs private or one dies.