Anonymous wrote:To not be around the lower classes. You can rationale it anyway you want but that’s the TRUTH.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There are many schools in lower Montgomery County that are no longer the gems they were. Your kids are only middle school / high school students once; when the public option only focuses on troubled / special needs kids, you can either roll the dice and move or pay for private. Pretty simple.
I feel like privates also somewhat cater to special needs kids, no? Or do they counsel them out under certain circumstances?
Some private schools do. Others, only accept the best and brightest and keep out the kids with disabilities or that are disruptive. That’s the school my kids are at
Possibly at ninth but any school that starts before ninth takes kids that are not the best and brightest. Hard to tell at 5 yrs old. Lifers don’t need to get in on merit so they don’t need to be the brightest. Other hooks get kids in in the upper grades who are not the best - see GDS US last year.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There are many schools in lower Montgomery County that are no longer the gems they were. Your kids are only middle school / high school students once; when the public option only focuses on troubled / special needs kids, you can either roll the dice and move or pay for private. Pretty simple.
I feel like privates also somewhat cater to special needs kids, no? Or do they counsel them out under certain circumstances?
Some private schools do. Others, only accept the best and brightest and keep out the kids with disabilities or that are disruptive. That’s the school my kids are at
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There are many schools in lower Montgomery County that are no longer the gems they were. Your kids are only middle school / high school students once; when the public option only focuses on troubled / special needs kids, you can either roll the dice and move or pay for private. Pretty simple.
I feel like privates also somewhat cater to special needs kids, no? Or do they counsel them out under certain circumstances?
Anonymous wrote:Stick with public or homeschooling then OP. No one wants you at private with all of your negativity.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There are many schools in lower Montgomery County that are no longer the gems they were. Your kids are only middle school / high school students once; when the public option only focuses on troubled / special needs kids, you can either roll the dice and move or pay for private. Pretty simple.
I feel like privates also somewhat cater to special needs kids, no? Or do they counsel them out under certain circumstances?
Anonymous wrote:There are many schools in lower Montgomery County that are no longer the gems they were. Your kids are only middle school / high school students once; when the public option only focuses on troubled / special needs kids, you can either roll the dice and move or pay for private. Pretty simple.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:An honest answer that is both kind of lame and incredibly privileged: one reason we pay for private is because we both work busy, stressful jobs and I don’t want to dedicate the time needed navigate the public school system. Privates make it so easy to know what is going on at school and in the community, which is a time saver/stress reliever. I get to spend my school thinking hours on my kid and not the system. Another reason is that most privates offer on site extended day while our PS district busses kids to a YMCA *if* there is space. I don’t have to navigate waitlists and juggle after care options. Similarly ours offers summer camps with first come sign ups to students. That’s a huge benefit to the ease of our daily lives.
This is us too. I keep light tabs but I feel confident they are getting a great education and I don’t have to stress about things or get involved.
Anonymous wrote:An honest answer that is both kind of lame and incredibly privileged: one reason we pay for private is because we both work busy, stressful jobs and I don’t want to dedicate the time needed navigate the public school system. Privates make it so easy to know what is going on at school and in the community, which is a time saver/stress reliever. I get to spend my school thinking hours on my kid and not the system. Another reason is that most privates offer on site extended day while our PS district busses kids to a YMCA *if* there is space. I don’t have to navigate waitlists and juggle after care options. Similarly ours offers summer camps with first come sign ups to students. That’s a huge benefit to the ease of our daily lives.
Anonymous wrote:An honest answer that is both kind of lame and incredibly privileged: one reason we pay for private is because we both work busy, stressful jobs and I don’t want to dedicate the time needed navigate the public school system. Privates make it so easy to know what is going on at school and in the community, which is a time saver/stress reliever. I get to spend my school thinking hours on my kid and not the system. Another reason is that most privates offer on site extended day while our PS district busses kids to a YMCA *if* there is space. I don’t have to navigate waitlists and juggle after care options. Similarly ours offers summer camps with first come sign ups to students. That’s a huge benefit to the ease of our daily lives.