Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There's no guarantee that public school will help your family establish neighborhood friendships. People move A LOT and even neighbors who stick around might send their kids to private school or homeschool.
Good on op for at least trying though. Neighborhood communities and neighborhood friends are something that kids are missing.
thanks, PP![]()
We'd also like to meet more parents and make family friends, too. In our increasingly online world - and before our kids get sucked into tons of weekend extracurriculars - we know the time to invest in making neighborhood friends is now!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There's no guarantee that public school will help your family establish neighborhood friendships. People move A LOT and even neighbors who stick around might send their kids to private school or homeschool.
Good on op for at least trying though. Neighborhood communities and neighborhood friends are something that kids are missing.
thanks, PP![]()
We'd also like to meet more parents and make family friends, too. In our increasingly online world - and before our kids get sucked into tons of weekend extracurriculars - we know the time to invest in making neighborhood friends is now!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There's no guarantee that public school will help your family establish neighborhood friendships. People move A LOT and even neighbors who stick around might send their kids to private school or homeschool.
Good on op for at least trying though. Neighborhood communities and neighborhood friends are something that kids are missing.
Anonymous wrote:There's no guarantee that public school will help your family establish neighborhood friendships. People move A LOT and even neighbors who stick around might send their kids to private school or homeschool.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP this is a no brainer. I’m in DC. Definately private over DCPS. DCPS is a mess and teaches to the lowest common denominator.
Now if you were in a much, much better school district then the decision might be a little harder.
Lastly, no way would I prioritize being friends with neighbors or whatever over my kids education.
BTW OP, even if you decide to go DCPS, you will see lots of kids leave DCPS in upper elementary or by middle school.
Don’t take advice about education from an adult who can’t spell “definitely.” Especially when we have spell check option these days.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
We’re a family that can afford private, but my head and heart are in different places.
My heart says that it wants to try public for K through 5 to build community with our neighbors. Our local DCPS school is rated at 7 out of 10 on a public rating site, and our neighbors who sent their kids there are almost all happy with it (and most go onto public MS).
My head says that our kids will get a better education, be less stressed and more nurtured emotionally, exposed to more and varied core subjects (including foreign language and science in the core curriculum) from K—> on, and be safer (guns, behavioral issues) in private.
Personally, I fear the repercussions of starting my kid off with a silver spoon - and the reality that kids would be located all over DC, MoCo, and NoVa - will hurt our chances of building strong enduring family friendships.
We’re not religious, so we don’t belong to a church or synagogue and don’t have a channel to make friends over time that way.
How would you advise us to decide b/w public and private? We’ve tossed in applications to top privates JIC.
Just stop.
No private is "safer" from guns or drugs etc.. .That is absurd.
"behavioral issues" again you are an idiot. Private has just as many as public. Mommy & daddy donate kid stays, not to mention most privates have no counselors.
Send your kid to public you fool you need the help.
Anonymous wrote:I would pick the school that's the best fit for your kids. We are in public but about half of the families we liked moved to private between grades 3-5. They had many reasons for moving but one was always because they couldn't find their community at public. You could always try out public K and make that effort to meet people and make friends and then determine if it's a good fit.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
We’re a family that can afford private, but my head and heart are in different places.
My heart says that it wants to try public for K through 5 to build community with our neighbors. Our local DCPS school is rated at 7 out of 10 on a public rating site, and our neighbors who sent their kids there are almost all happy with it (and most go onto public MS).
My head says that our kids will get a better education, be less stressed and more nurtured emotionally, exposed to more and varied core subjects (including foreign language and science in the core curriculum) from K—> on, and be safer (guns, behavioral issues) in private.
Personally, I fear the repercussions of starting my kid off with a silver spoon - and the reality that kids would be located all over DC, MoCo, and NoVa - will hurt our chances of building strong enduring family friendships.
We’re not religious, so we don’t belong to a church or synagogue and don’t have a channel to make friends over time that way.
How would you advise us to decide b/w public and private? We’ve tossed in applications to top privates JIC.
Just stop.
No private is "safer" from guns or drugs etc.. .That is absurd.
"behavioral issues" again you are an idiot. Private has just as many as public. Mommy & daddy donate kid stays, not to mention most privates have no counselors.
Send your kid to public you fool you need the help.
Anonymous wrote:I would pick the school that's the best fit for your kids. We are in public but about half of the families we liked moved to private between grades 3-5. They had many reasons for moving but one was always because they couldn't find their community at public. You could always try out public K and make that effort to meet people and make friends and then determine if it's a good fit.
Anonymous wrote:We started in public and moved to private. DD has a strong group of friends she made in the girl scout troop that serves her public school, and that she stayed in after changing schools. But she made no lasting friends from the classroom. The classes are big and it's hard for parents of classmates to meet each other. No classmates lived on our street so there weren't friends on the bus ride. Our public school did not share a class list or do anything to facilitate families meeting.
Honestly the things that build community are smaller groups with adult involvement, like scouts, sports, and church, and neighborhoods where people are out and about.