Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am a private school lifer: the only reason these private school kids have so much confidence and poise is because they have more money.
If you have more money and your kids have more activities and the ability to be involved, they will be fine.
Yeah that’s what I can’t separate. Will our kid have that air of self possession because we have a beach house and insist on manners and French lessons? Or bc he was in school somewhere? I’m genuinely wondering.
The country with the most French speakers in the world is the Democratic Republic of the Congo. Try a sabbatical there.
Anonymous wrote:My DC is about to hit a grade where if we go private, now is the time to think about making some moves.
My DH and I went to private our whole lives. My DH is super against sending our child to private. DH went to a big deal private here and disliked it. He is not convinced the education is worth the price, thinks our child has a better shot at college and life skills in a AP track public, and doesn’t want our child to think the world works the way DH believes private school kids around here do.
I can only admit this anonymously, I’m so embarrassed, but this the truth. I am afraid if my child doesn’t go to private school he’ll never be able to move in upper class circles with total ease. He won’t understand those sort of dog whistle references or get exposed to some things that are good to know when you’re an adult. There is a “code”. There just is. And upon reflection I can’t figure out if I learned that code, which I need him to know, from my parents or from private school. Will he miss out on that culture piece of things if we keep him in public?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am a private school lifer: the only reason these private school kids have so much confidence and poise is because they have more money.
If you have more money and your kids have more activities and the ability to be involved, they will be fine.
Yeah that’s what I can’t separate. Will our kid have that air of self possession because we have a beach house and insist on manners and French lessons? Or bc he was in school somewhere? I’m genuinely wondering.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Your DH is missing the point. If you send your kids to public high schools in the DMV area, they will most likely come out with about the same education level as their private school peers and will mix with kids at about the same income level. Have him check out the student parking lots of the local high schools to see what the kids drive if he doesn't believe me. They will not be slumming with the masses and be exposed to varied income levels and life POVs as he romanticizes.
HOWEVER, you are correct in what they will miss out on is "the club" that private schools offer. Yes, there is a networking advantage that hangs on throughout college and probably beyond.
You're wrong about this. Even Langley HS in McLean is not the same as Potomac school. The level of wealth at Potomac school is mind blowing. Big difference when you have a graduation class of less than 100 at Potomac versus 600+ at Langley HS. Have you seen the new shiny facility at Potomac that was opened in late 2019? Even Langley HS does not have that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Your DH is missing the point. If you send your kids to public high schools in the DMV area, they will most likely come out with about the same education level as their private school peers and will mix with kids at about the same income level. Have him check out the student parking lots of the local high schools to see what the kids drive if he doesn't believe me. They will not be slumming with the masses and be exposed to varied income levels and life POVs as he romanticizes.
HOWEVER, you are correct in what they will miss out on is "the club" that private schools offer. Yes, there is a networking advantage that hangs on throughout college and probably beyond.
You're wrong about this. Even Langley HS in McLean is not the same as Potomac school. The level of wealth at Potomac school is mind blowing. Big difference when you have a graduation class of less than 100 at Potomac versus 600+ at Langley HS. Have you seen the new shiny facility at Potomac that was opened in late 2019? Even Langley HS does not have that.
It’s not so much wealth as learning to show respect and decorum, which is just not at all expected in most public schools - even the “good” ones. I find the most respectful kids are the African American kids (esp boys) born into middle class or affluent black families. As my son told me once, “My black friends’ moms don’t allow them to get away with shit.”
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My DH went to only privates, had a nanny, housekeeper, gardener growing up, and has no professional ambition. He works a low level low stress job.
I went public, got 0$ from my parents for college, worked my ass off, have a high level medium stress job, have lived and worked in 5 countries and have travelled all over the world on my own, 40 countries and it’s not the kind of Eurorail travel 8 countries in 8 days. People consider me accomplished.
Both of us our fine. We’re doing what feels ok to us. If your kid goes private or public there are no guarantees about how they will end up. I think more depends on the family, and the individual.
So did you marry him for the family money?
Anonymous wrote:My DH went to only privates, had a nanny, housekeeper, gardener growing up, and has no professional ambition. He works a low level low stress job.
I went public, got 0$ from my parents for college, worked my ass off, have a high level medium stress job, have lived and worked in 5 countries and have travelled all over the world on my own, 40 countries and it’s not the kind of Eurorail travel 8 countries in 8 days. People consider me accomplished.
Both of us our fine. We’re doing what feels ok to us. If your kid goes private or public there are no guarantees about how they will end up. I think more depends on the family, and the individual.
Anonymous wrote:This is baffling. I am married to someone who went to all private schools plus boarding school for high school. I went to college at an Ivy where the private school kids co-mingled with the public school kids. This is just not a real thing in actual life that there is some code that the public school kids don't know. Unless you're talking about Crazy Rich Asian level of wealth, I think most people are just going about their lives and not thinking about this crap. Weird OP.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Your DH is missing the point. If you send your kids to public high schools in the DMV area, they will most likely come out with about the same education level as their private school peers and will mix with kids at about the same income level. Have him check out the student parking lots of the local high schools to see what the kids drive if he doesn't believe me. They will not be slumming with the masses and be exposed to varied income levels and life POVs as he romanticizes.
HOWEVER, you are correct in what they will miss out on is "the club" that private schools offer. Yes, there is a networking advantage that hangs on throughout college and probably beyond.
You're wrong about this. Even Langley HS in McLean is not the same as Potomac school. The level of wealth at Potomac school is mind blowing. Big difference when you have a graduation class of less than 100 at Potomac versus 600+ at Langley HS. Have you seen the new shiny facility at Potomac that was opened in late 2019? Even Langley HS does not have that.
It’s not so much wealth as learning to show respect and decorum, which is just not at all expected in most public schools - even the “good” ones. I find the most respectful kids are the African American kids (esp boys) born into middle class or affluent black families. As my son told me once, “My black friends’ moms don’t allow them to get away with shit.”