Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think much of what ultimately influences what our experience in life is depends on what social class we were born into. I'm not saying this as a good thing, just an observation. There is not that big of a difference between someone whose family has a lot of money, has traveled extensively, etc, who goes to BCC and someone whose family has a lot of money and who goes to GDS. If at the same college they will both seem more cultured than a student whose family doesn't have a lot of money regardless of whether that other student went to private or public.
I don't know, I do think part of what you're saying makes sense, but having witnessed public and private school kids from the same neighborhood (literally the same street, so same SES or as close as you're going to get) act differently in public settings. Notably, one situation was in a coffee shop like place where high school kids routinely stopped for breakfast before school. I was also there often because it was close to my kids' school. The owner and other guests commented multiple times that the behavior of the two groups of students was vastly different yet they were all from the same area and I noticed the cars that many of the public school kids drove were vastly nicer than those of the private school kids, so I don't think it's totally a class thing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m PP - for the record, I’d LOVE to be able to send my child to public school. If I had no choice financially then yes, they’d be in public but because I can choose and I know the state of our schools, I choose and pay for private.
What public school system are you talking about?
LAUSD
I knew you weren’t in the DC area. We have excellent public schools here.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m PP - for the record, I’d LOVE to be able to send my child to public school. If I had no choice financially then yes, they’d be in public but because I can choose and I know the state of our schools, I choose and pay for private.
What public school system are you talking about?
LAUSD
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m PP - for the record, I’d LOVE to be able to send my child to public school. If I had no choice financially then yes, they’d be in public but because I can choose and I know the state of our schools, I choose and pay for private.
What public school system are you talking about?
LAUSD
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m PP - for the record, I’d LOVE to be able to send my child to public school. If I had no choice financially then yes, they’d be in public but because I can choose and I know the state of our schools, I choose and pay for private.
What public school system are you talking about?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:^^
Elite colleges/Ivy leagues are a reach for everyone, unless you can pay to play (see Rick Singer scandal). Going to an elite private school does not guarantee Ivy League admission.
I'd rather my children become confident leaders at a tier two college (e.g. Boston College, UVA) than be over their head outcasts on the margins because their inflated public school GPA helped them get into Northwestern or Cornell. An elite college is a waste if your child is passive and can't make fast friends with the polished rich kids who control campus.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m PP - for the record, I’d LOVE to be able to send my child to public school. If I had no choice financially then yes, they’d be in public but because I can choose and I know the state of our schools, I choose and pay for private.
Anonymous wrote:I’m PP - for the record, I’d LOVE to be able to send my child to public school. If I had no choice financially then yes, they’d be in public but because I can choose and I know the state of our schools, I choose and pay for private.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Since when is Uva a tier 2 college and Cornell a tier one?!
Boston College isn’t either.
Anonymous wrote:Since when is Uva a tier 2 college and Cornell a tier one?!
Anonymous wrote:^^
Elite colleges/Ivy leagues are a reach for everyone, unless you can pay to play (see Rick Singer scandal). Going to an elite private school does not guarantee Ivy League admission.