Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No, it’s the private school parents who put down more than one deposit and hold more than one seat you should be complaining about. That’s privilege and yet people here seem to think that’s ok.
I do all the above. We applied selective public, paid deposit on current private, applied for additional 2 privates. My child got into one private, WL at the other, and I don’t have the decision on the selective public. Child has a ranking and wants the WL school first, followed by the public, then the other 2 privates where child is “occupying a space”. We will absolutely free these spaces if child gets one of the other 2 options. Truth is, we are only looking out for our kid, not yours. We follow the contract rules. Deal with it!
Acc to OP, you are good. It’s only the ignorant, lazy public school parents who don’t value education as much as you do who need to make way for you and all the other private school parents.
Anonymous wrote:After you’ve applied and been admitted to a top private school isn’t the time to finally decide whether your public school is a suitable option. You can figure all of that out before applying. Really you can! All of the information is already there.
It’s annoying to people who have committed to private school, ONLY applied to private schools and properly assessed their options before applying. It’s not like the random public school you are considering just randomly popped up over night. You have the data you need. You’re taking up seats for kids who definitely know they want private school while you twiddle your thumbs asking dumb questions and asking people to make comparisons for you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No, it’s the private school parents who put down more than one deposit and hold more than one seat you should be complaining about. That’s privilege and yet people here seem to think that’s ok.
I do all the above. We applied selective public, paid deposit on current private, applied for additional 2 privates. My child got into one private, WL at the other, and I don’t have the decision on the selective public. Child has a ranking and wants the WL school first, followed by the public, then the other 2 privates where child is “occupying a space”. We will absolutely free these spaces if child gets one of the other 2 options. Truth is, we are only looking out for our kid, not yours. We follow the contract rules. Deal with it!
Anonymous wrote:Agree with OP. Or that an anonymous board is going to give you reliable information. Do the work, ask people that you know actually have kids in the school.
Anonymous wrote:
This comes off as being bitter about being on the WL or taking up seats, maybe you should have done something to make your child more competitive?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP - when it comes down to it - you both have the right to do what you want. They are not doing anything wrong, or even anything rude. They are lucky to have a public option that is good enough for them to consider as being "in the running". If you do not have that luxury, then it is your responsibility to apply to enough private schools so that you will have a private option. If you didn't do that, that's on you.
If my kid has to go to their safety-school private for HS because they got denied by their top-tier private choices - that's the way it goes. That is exactly why the safety school was on the list (and if we had needed multiple safeties, we would have done that). Sure, it'll be sad for them (and us) compared to getting into one of those top-tier schools - but I'm not mad that someone whose child was accepted to the top-tier school is on the fence about the private vs public magnet vs public boundary.
Hoping it works out for you and your child though! And for ours.
This is OP. I am zoned for a W school so have fantastic options. My kid applied to 3 private schools and got into all three of them. But there was a lot of research and asking questions before we even applied. So no sour grapes here - just shaking my head about all of the poor planning and research public school parents seem to have done on their options.
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Anonymous wrote:OP, sounds like your waitlist frustration better directed at school - whether for not offering admission right away or for giving accepted families a lot of time to decide.
Anonymous wrote:No, it’s the private school parents who put down more than one deposit and hold more than one seat you should be complaining about. That’s privilege and yet people here seem to think that’s ok.
Anonymous wrote:You might prefer that your kid go to Walls vs. private school, but there's no guarantee they will get into Walls. So you apply to Walls and private schools because between private and e.g.Eastern HS, you'll definitely choose private.
Or you might anticipate getting more financial aid than you get or hoping your kid will win one of the rare merit scholarships. Your child gets in but it's going to cost more than anticipated,so you don't know if you should choose private.
Anonymous wrote:Agree with OP. Or that an anonymous board is going to give you reliable information. Do the work, ask people that you know actually have kids in the school.
Anonymous wrote:In my jurisdiction, we have to apply to specialty programs in the public school. We are weighing the public specialty option {which was not a guarantee) with the private options.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP - when it comes down to it - you both have the right to do what you want. They are not doing anything wrong, or even anything rude. They are lucky to have a public option that is good enough for them to consider as being "in the running". If you do not have that luxury, then it is your responsibility to apply to enough private schools so that you will have a private option. If you didn't do that, that's on you.
If my kid has to go to their safety-school private for HS because they got denied by their top-tier private choices - that's the way it goes. That is exactly why the safety school was on the list (and if we had needed multiple safeties, we would have done that). Sure, it'll be sad for them (and us) compared to getting into one of those top-tier schools - but I'm not mad that someone whose child was accepted to the top-tier school is on the fence about the private vs public magnet vs public boundary.
Hoping it works out for you and your child though! And for ours.
This is OP. I am zoned for a W school so have fantastic options. My kid applied to 3 private schools and got into all three of them. But there was a lot of research and asking questions before we even applied. So no sour grapes here - just shaking my head about all of the poor planning and research public school parents seem to have done on their options.