Anonymous wrote:Don't understand OP's question... private school IS essentially a giant con... at least for UMC folks. For the very wealthy the cost is immaterial and it's all about just being part of that world and is a precursor to elite colleges (which they have a much higher rate of acceptance to than private UMC kids). For LMC or below then it's a rare opportunity to be a part of that world for a spell via fin aid and likewise can open doors for elite schools, but often comes with the downside of feeling like a fish out of water socially (varies by kid/school of course). For UMC families, they're stretching their finances, not gaining a college admissions advantage, so you've gotta be REALLY sold that your kids are getting a vastly superior educational experience, which I guess may apply if you're zoned for a school with some major issues, but that's not the case for most UMC folks.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Same here. DD was advanced in public, at least a year ahead of the curve. In public she was at best average and had to work to catch up.Anonymous wrote:
NP. This is just so school-dependent. We had the opposite experience. Our kid who was in the supposedly hardest classes in his public middle school was shockingly behind when entering competitive private high school. He went from advanced math in public to remedial math in private. I hadn’t realized how far behind he was.
You mean in private she had to catch up, right?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Don't understand OP's question... private school IS essentially a giant con... at least for UMC folks. For the very wealthy the cost is immaterial and it's all about just being part of that world and is a precursor to elite colleges (which they have a much higher rate of acceptance to than private UMC kids). For LMC or below then it's a rare opportunity to be a part of that world for a spell via fin aid and likewise can open doors for elite schools, but often comes with the downside of feeling like a fish out of water socially (varies by kid/school of course). For UMC families, they're stretching their finances, not gaining a college admissions advantage, so you've gotta be REALLY sold that your kids are getting a vastly superior educational experience, which I guess may apply if you're zoned for a school with some major issues, but that's not the case for most UMC folks.
I’m UMC. My kid went to a good public middle school without major issues. But kids were vaping IN the classroom, there were fights so severe kids were hospitalized, and a teacher got hospitalized from dealing with a disruptive kid. The educational experience was a joke. My kid was assigned two books to read in three years. The rigor of private HS with actual expectations was an enormous shock.
I think you are wildly naive about what most kids experience in public schools. It is appalling.
I could have written this post. This was exactly our experience. Recently we had a weapons at school situation so we are now looking at private for HS. A lot of the antagonistic posters here are assuming that everyone else’s zoned school is as excellent as their zoned school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Don't understand OP's question... private school IS essentially a giant con... at least for UMC folks. For the very wealthy the cost is immaterial and it's all about just being part of that world and is a precursor to elite colleges (which they have a much higher rate of acceptance to than private UMC kids). For LMC or below then it's a rare opportunity to be a part of that world for a spell via fin aid and likewise can open doors for elite schools, but often comes with the downside of feeling like a fish out of water socially (varies by kid/school of course). For UMC families, they're stretching their finances, not gaining a college admissions advantage, so you've gotta be REALLY sold that your kids are getting a vastly superior educational experience, which I guess may apply if you're zoned for a school with some major issues, but that's not the case for most UMC folks.
I’m UMC. My kid went to a good public middle school without major issues. But kids were vaping IN the classroom, there were fights so severe kids were hospitalized, and a teacher got hospitalized from dealing with a disruptive kid. The educational experience was a joke. My kid was assigned two books to read in three years. The rigor of private HS with actual expectations was an enormous shock.
I think you are wildly naive about what most kids experience in public schools. It is appalling.
oh god. shut up already.
NP: What a rude comment to the PP’s reasonable post.