Anonymous wrote:With your income and three kids, you should be able to get a scholarship at one of the "fancy" DC privates. I would apply to schools that you like and they will work with you on the cost.
Anonymous wrote:I’m not OP but for those of you saying apply then see if you get FA, for those of us on a lower income ( lower than OP) just the application fee is a barrier. If I knew my kid would get in and it would be affordable for us it’s worth it. But to blow $$ just to apply then wait and see is money down the drain needlessly.,
Anonymous wrote:This may be an oxymoron, but we are seeking a more affordable quality independent school. We have 3 children and have tried upper NWDC public schools, but we have reached our tipping point. And yes, our children have different needs. Our rising 5th grader will thrive in any learning environment. He’s just wired that way, loves learning and is curious. Our rising 2nd grade needs a smaller classroom size and more individual attention than we can get in a 30-student DCPS, even with the best educators. Our prek kid still naps and loves friends, snacks, imaginative play, colors and numbers.
We are on one income at $250k/year and would love a school in NWDC or not too far in MD or VA on the west side (e.g. Bethesda or Arlington)
Thank you for your help with possible schools to consider in the fall for 2024-2025 enrollment.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s called Catholic school.
Most Catholic schools are not independent and most people who specify independent are not looking for a Catholic school.
Parish schools are not, the rest are.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s called Catholic school.
Most Catholic schools are not independent and most people who specify independent are not looking for a Catholic school.
Anonymous wrote:It’s called Catholic school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I wish this idea weren’t a unicorn. I saw preciously someone post tuitions for top schools from the 90’s and tuition has far outpaced inflation by whole lot. Why? Did the top private schools used to have fewer frills? I would love it if there were quality secular private schools that mainly focused on quality in academics rather than on posh tennis courts.
I went to a private elementary school that is extremely popular here back in the late eighties and early nineties. The school now has a math specialist, two reading specialists, a learning specialist, director of studies, division heads, various counselors, a nurse, DEi person, safety person, and admissions , communications , and development all have "teams." Additionally, there is endless "support staff." None of those positions existed when I was there. Kindergarten for me was less than $2,000. There is a lot of competition between schools to keep up with each other, and that has lead to this kind of growth. Not long ago I was talking with someone on STA faculty who said that the reason their athletic facilities renovation was so elaborate was because they had to compete with Prep. Private schools spend more to stay comparable to peers, that is constantly increasing at a rate much faster than inflation, and tuition reflects it.
Anonymous wrote:I wish this idea weren’t a unicorn. I saw preciously someone post tuitions for top schools from the 90’s and tuition has far outpaced inflation by whole lot. Why? Did the top private schools used to have fewer frills? I would love it if there were quality secular private schools that mainly focused on quality in academics rather than on posh tennis courts.
Anonymous wrote:You can’t afford it, sorry.